Catalogues of solar observations held at MSSL/UCL. Datasets available are SOHO CDS, SOHO EIT, Yohkoh SXT. URL links to data files are provided (EIT data files provided by SDAC, NASA). Reference: http://www.mssl.ucl.ac.uk/www_solar/surfindex.html
Solar Radio Emission Observations at “Orbita” Radio Polygon
Short Name:
solar_flux data
Date:
12 Dec 2024 19:58:36
Publisher:
Fesenkov Astrophysical Institute
Description:
The “Orbita” Radio Polygon at an altitude of 2750 meters conducts solar radio emission observations using state-of-the-art equipment. This includes instruments for monitoring solar radio flux at frequencies of 1 GHz and 2.8 GHz, as well as the Callisto solar radio spectrograph, which is part of the international e-Callisto network. These tools enable the detection of solar radio bursts of types II, III, IV, and V, and provide valuable insights for forecasting the geo-effectiveness of solar flare activity.
The provided dataset consists of daily tables, where each table corresponds to a single observation day. The data includes two columns:
- **timestamp**: The time of observation at the detector.
- **SFU**: The solar flux unit measurement, representing the intensity of solar radio emission in SFU (Solar Flux Units).
The data is collected and provided by the Institute of Ionosphere (https://ionos.kz/).
Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory Telescope Data Center
Description:
This catalog contains derived information and access to spectra for a
catalog of objects in the field of M31, drawn from the study of star
clusters, HII regions, PNe and individual stars in M31 done with
Hectospec on the MMT by Nelson Caldwell and a host of others.
WFAU, Institute for Astronomy, University of Edinburgh
Description:
The SuperCOSMOS data held in the SSA primarily originate from scans of Palomar and UK Schmidt blue, red and near-IR southern sky surveys. The ESO Schmidt R (dec < -17.5) and Palomar POSS-I E (dec > -17.5) surveys have also been scanned and provide a 1st epoch red measurement. Further details on the surveys, the scanning process and the raw parameters extracted can be found on the further information link. The SSA is housed in a relational database running on Microsoft SQL Server 2000. Data are stored in tables which are inter-linked via reference ID numbers. In addition to the astronomical object catalogues these tables also contain information on the plates that were scanned, survey field centres and calibration coefficients. Most user science queries will only need to access the SOURCE table or to a lesser extent the DETECTION table.