348,965 research outputs found

    The Public Archives at the NASA Michelson Science Center

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    This presentation describes the scientific data sets and user services accessible through the public archive at the Michelson Science Center (MSC). The MSC is charged by NASA with providing long-term data archiving capabilities for the Navigator Program, whose goal is to detect and characterize Earth like planets around stars other than the Sun. The archive makes extensive re-use of the component-based software architecture of the NASA IPAC Infrared Science Archive (IRSA). It also re-uses IRSAs Configuration Management system, user support tools, and development and data ingestion processes

    A New Approach to Tagging Data in the Astronomical Literature

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    Data Tags are strings used in journals to indicate the origin of the archival data and to enable the reader to recover the data. The NASA/IPAC Infrared Science Archive (IRSA) has recently introduced a new approach to production of data tags and recovery of data from them. Many of the data access services at the IRSA return filtered data sets (such as subsets of source catalogs) and dynamically created products (such as image cutouts); these dynamically created products are not saved permanently at the archive. Rather than tag the data sets from which the query result sets are drawn, the archive tags the query that generates the results. A single tag can, then, encode a complex dynamic data set and simplifies the embedding of tags in manuscripts and journals. By logging user queries and all the parameters for those query as Data Tags, IRSA can re-create the query and rerun the IRSA service using the same search parameters used when the Data Tag was created. At the same time, the logs give a simple count of the actual numbers of queries made to the archive, a powerful metric of archive usage unobtainable from the Apache web server logs. Currently, IRSA creates tags for queries to more than 20 data sets, including the Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS), Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS) and Spitzer Space Telescope Legacy Data Sets. These tags are returned by the spatial query engine, Atlas. IRSA plans to create tags for queries to the rest of its services in late Spring 2007. The archive provides a simple web interface which recovers a data set that corresponds to the input data tag. Archived data sets may evolve in time due to improved calibrations or augmentations to the data set. IRSA’s query based approach guarantees that users always receive the best available data sets

    Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS NET) Land Data Assimilation System (LDAS) and Other Assimilated Hydrological Data at NASA GES DISC

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    The NASA Goddard Earth Sciences Data and Information Services Center (GES DISC) provides science support for several data sets relevant to agriculture and food security, including the Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS NET) Land Data Assimilation System (LDAS), or FLDAS data set. The GES DISC is one of twelve NASA Earth Observing System (EOS) data centers that process, archive, document, and distribute data from Earth science missions and related projects. The GES DISC hosts a wide range of remote sensing and model data, and provides reliable and robust data access and other services to users worldwide. Beyond data archive and access, the GES DISC offers many services to visualize and analyze the data. This presentation provides a summary of the hydrological data available at the GES DISC, along with an overview of related data services. Specifically, the FLDAS data set has been adapted to work with domains, data streams, and monitoring and forecast requirements associated with food security assessment in data-sparse, developing country settings. The FLDAS global monthly data have a 0.1 x 0.1 degree spatial resolution covering the period from January 1982 to present. Global FLDAS monthly anomaly and monthly climatology data are also available at the GES DISC to evaluate how current conditions compare to averages over the FLDAS 35-year period. Several case studies using the FLDAS soil moisture, evapotranspiration, rainfall, runoff, and surface temperature data will be presented

    Planning and managing the cost of compromise for AV retention and access

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    Long-term retention and access to audiovisual (AV) assets as part of a preservation strategy inevitably involve some form of compromise in order to achieve acceptable levels of cost, throughput, quality, and many other parameters. Examples include quality control and throughput in media transfer chains; data safety and accessibility in digital storage systems; and service levels for ingest and access for archive functions delivered as services. We present new software tools and frameworks developed in the PrestoPRIME project that allow these compromises to be quantitatively assessed, planned, and managed for file-based AV assets. Our focus is how to give an archive an assurance that when they design and operate a preservation strategy as a set of services, it will function as expected and will cope with the inevitable and often unpredictable variations that happen in operation. This includes being able to do cost projections, sensitivity analysis, simulation of “disaster scenarios,” and to govern preservation services using service-level agreements and policies

    IVOA Recommendation: Resource Metadata for the Virtual Observatory Version 1.12

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    An essential capability of the Virtual Observatory is a means for describing what data and computational facilities are available where, and once identified, how to use them. The data themselves have associated metadata (e.g., FITS keywords), and similarly we require metadata about data collections and data services so that VO users can easily find information of interest. Furthermore, such metadata are needed in order to manage distributed queries efficiently; if a user is interested in finding x-ray images there is no point in querying the HST archive, for example. In this document we suggest an architecture for resource and service metadata and describe the relationship of this architecture to emerging Web Services standards. We also define an initial set of metadata concepts

    Access to Czech Social Survey Data

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    The article presents practical information on the sources of Czech social survey data for both researchers interested in data on Czech society & data professionals interested in the state of the art of data services. Czech survey research was deeply affected by the communist regime, but underwent intense developments in 1960s & after the revolution in 1989. In the field of official statistics, data services are provided by the Czech Statistical Office. The Sociological Data Archive (SDA) of the Instit of Sociology provides data from quantitative sociological surveys, promotes data dissemination & secondary analysis & supports large research projects (eg, ISSP, ESS). The Czech Archive of Qualitative Data & Documents at the Masaryk U & Soft Data Archive MEDARD at the Virtual Instit provide data services for qualitative social research. A number of public domain data sets remain under the responsibility of academic & governmental research institutions. It is also possible to access the data of private research agencies. Czech data are accessible also via international data services

    The European Nucleotide Archive

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    The European Nucleotide Archive (ENA; http://www.ebi.ac.uk/ena) is Europe’s primary nucleotide-sequence repository. The ENA consists of three main databases: the Sequence Read Archive (SRA), the Trace Archive and EMBL-Bank. The objective of ENA is to support and promote the use of nucleotide sequencing as an experimental research platform by providing data submission, archive, search and download services. In this article, we outline these services and describe major changes and improvements introduced during 2010. These include extended EMBL-Bank and SRA-data submission services, extended ENA Browser functionality, support for submitting data to the European Genome-phenome Archive (EGA) through SRA, and the launch of a new sequence similarity search service

    Software Architecture of the Spitzer Space Telescope Uplink/Archive

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    The Spitzer Science Center (SSC) provides a set of science user tools to support planning and archive access via the Internet. We will present the software architecture and design principles that underlie the Uplink/Archive subsystem of the SSC. Included in the discussion will be a review of the original Uplink architecture as presented in P1-59 ADASS 1999 and the evolutionary changes for the current deployment. The Archive subsystem is based on the same set of core components used in the Uplink subsystem but is based on Web services technology to allow open access to the Archive. Web services technology provides a basis for searching the archive and retrieving data products
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