The advent of the Fermi-GST with its unprecedented capability to monitor the
entire 4 pi sky within less than 2-3 hours, introduced new standard in time
domain gamma-ray astronomy. To explore this new avenue of extragalactic physics
the F-GAMMA programme undertook the task of conducting nearly monthly,
broadband radio monitoring of selected blazars from January 2007 to January
2015. In this work we release all the light curves at 2.64, 4.85, 8.35, 10.45,
14.6, 23.05, 32, and 43 GHz and present first order derivative data products
after all necessary post-measurement corrections and quality checks; that is
flux density moments and spectral indices. The release includes 155 sources.
The effective cadence after the quality flagging is around one radio SED every
1.3 months. The coherence of each radio SED is around 40 minutes. The released
dataset includes more than 4×104 measurements. The median fractional
error at the lowest frequencies (2.64-10.45 GHz) is below 2%. At the highest
frequencies (14.6-43 GHz) with limiting factor of the atmospheric conditions,
the errors range from 3% to 9%, respectively.Comment: Accepted for publication in Section: Catalogs and data of Astronomy &
Astrophysic