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| Issue 2: June 2008 |
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| Contributors: Sarah Emery Bunn (Caltech), August Muench (Harvard), Roy Williams (Caltech) Editors: Dave De Young (NOAO), Sarah Emery Bunn (Caltech) |
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News & Announcements |
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The Heterogenous Telescope Networks (HTN) group, a consortium of robotic telescope operators and users interested in the benefits of networked observing, are offering a substantial amount of observing time spread across four robotic telescopes for an outstanding observing project of scientific merit that leverages the advantages of automated rapid follow-up. On offer in this call will be 50 hours of scheduled time split between the Faulkes North and Faulkes South telescopes, 10 hours of on-sky time on the Liverpool Telescope and 10 hours of on-sky time on MONET/North on. The call is now open and closes 25 JULY 2008. You can find more details at http://www.telescope-networks.org/cfp/. More about the HTN: http://www.telescope-networks.org |
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NVO Inside |
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"NVO Inside" is the idea that the VO is in use by many applications and data providers, not just by those that are branded as part of the official VO efforts. Do you use VO protocols or services? Produce VO content or applications? Does your research have "NVO Inside"? Please let us know! |
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The VO Inside WorldWide Telescope Microsoft Research recently released the WorldWide Telescope (WWT) software, which provides seamless access to astronomical data via an advanced interactive interface. The name "WorldWide Telescope" comes from the description by Alex Szalay and Jim Gray in 2002 of a new genre of astronomical research that would recognize and utilize the vast resources that were becoming available on the World Wide Web. As that grid of resources becomes a unified reality with the infrastructure provided by the VO efforts, Microsoft Research and the Space-Time Consortium at Harvard are developing WWT to unify these distributed resources on the astronomer's desktop.
WWT’s advanced interactive interface has been designed to give the user continuous feedback regarding where they are looking in the sky and what astronomical objects or interesting data are available there. Maintaining and providing context for the user has been a major focus of WWT development and this “context driven” interface is enhanced with other VO tools. A built-in SIMBAD name resolver, which is a common VO tool, is supplemented by a coordinate position search of the SIMBAD database that allows a user to identify an object in the WWT images via a simple right click. Additional resources available to the user via a right click include literature queries of the NASA ADS or Wikipedia. Since WWT supports the VOTable format, it can understand and present the results of any VO Registry query, and will soon be adding user defined VO searches to the interface. Future developments include a professional version of the WWT, nicknamed “WWT Pro.” WWT Pro will focus on expanding WWT’s current adoption of VO tools, especially those that allow an astronomer to search for and collect data for their research. Further, the WWT Pro project is looking to connect to the astronomical community in a number of ways. The project is developing a series of “tours” to show how to use the software for science research. These “tours” are a PowerPoint-like WWT feature that provides a simple way for a user to capture, annotate and share their sky exploration. The WWT Pro project is also interested in developing demonstration science projects by hosting large, coherent data sets that can be used to tackle specific research projects. Community donated data, example projects and feedback should be directed to August Muench (gmuench\@/cfa.harvard.edu). Links:
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Featured NVO Applications |
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VIM: Visual Integration & Mining VIM is a tool for investigating multiple sources (or sky positions) simultaneously. Each source becomes a row in a table, with catalog, image cutouts, and spectral information drawn from VO-accessible data collections. Proximity searches are performed with respect to catalog entries. For images, cutouts can be generated from the Skyview service, which has all the major image surveys. Spectra are available from SDSS and other surveys. Most of the world's astronomical data is available to VIM, as with any VO application, including primary resources (SDSS, 2MASS, NED, etc), and also the holdings of large data centers such as NASA, CDS, and ESO. You can find these either by keyword or by spatial correlation with your sources.
Data are added to your workbench through catalog proximity searches, cutout images, or spectra. You can select from a cache of primary catalogs or use the VO registry system to find and select other catalogs, which can then be added to your cache. Sources can be selected and sorted based on arithmetic predicates, and new columns can be created by arithmetic expression. As you work with VIM, a transcript of what you have done is created that can be used as a program to reproduce the same workbench or edited to scale up the data retrieval and computing. VIM is part of a suite of integrated data discovery and analysis tools that users will find when using the NVO. To read about or try out VIM, go to http://us-vo.org/vim - feedback should be directed to |
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NVO Calendar |
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23-27 June 2008 | Euro-VO DCA Workshop on how to publish data in the VO | Garching/München, Germany 3-11 September, 2008 | The 2008 NVO Summer School | Santa Fe, New Mexico 5-8 October 2008 | "Astronomical Data and the Virtual Observatory" session at CODATA21 | Kiev, Ukraine 27-31 October | IVOA Interoperability | Baltimore, Maryland 2-5 November 2008 | ADASS XVIII | Quebec City, Canada |
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