This table contains the metadata for the plates that went into USNO-B
1.0 as best as we can reconstruct it (i.e., largely those that also
make up the Digital Sky Survey DSS). Most of the source files were
obtained from http://www.nofs.navy.mil/data/fchpix/, some additional
contributions came from Dave Monet.
A validator for IVOA identifiers, checking
conformity to version 2 of the specification.
The service returns results in a tabular format, where an identifier is
valid if no row with msg_type="ERROR" is present.
As per DALI, the format of the table returned can be controlled
through the RESPONSEFORMAT parameter; for machine consumption, the
most useful values for that parameter are probably json and votable.
The code used here is available at
http://svn.ari.uni-heidelberg.de/svn/gavo/hdinputs/ivoidval
The VESPA PA team server's TAP end point. The Table Access
Protocol (TAP) lets you execute queries against our database tables,
inspect various metadata, and upload your own data. It is thus the
VO's premier way to access public data holdings.
Tables exposed through this endpoint include: epn_core from the gem_mars schema, epn_core from the nomad schema, epn_core from the soir schema, columns, groups, key_columns, keys, schemas, tables from the tap_schema schema.
WFAU, Institute for Astronomy, University of Edinburgh
Description:
The VHS will image the entire ~20 000 square degrees of the Southern Sky, with the exception of the areas already covered by the VIKING and VVV surveys, in J and Ks. The resulting data will be about 4 magnitudes deeper than 2MASS and DENIS. The 5000 square degrees covered by the Dark Energy Survey (DES), another imaging survey scheduled to begin in 2010 at the CTIO 4 metre Blanco telescope, will also be observed in H-band. The area around both of the Galactic Caps will be observed in Y- and H- band as well to be combined with the data from the VST ATLAS survey. The main science drivers of the VHS include: examining low mass and nearby stars, studying the merger history of the Galaxy, measuring the properties of Dark Energy through the examination of large-scale structure to a redshift of ~1, and searches for high redshift quasars.
WFAU, Institute for Astronomy, University of Edinburgh
Description:
The VHS will image the entire ~20 000 square degrees of the Southern Sky, with the exception of the areas already covered by the VIKING and VVV surveys, in J and Ks. The resulting data will be about 4 magnitudes deeper than 2MASS and DENIS. The 5000 square degrees covered by the Dark Energy Survey (DES), another imaging survey scheduled to begin in 2010 at the CTIO 4 metre Blanco telescope, will also be observed in H-band. The area around both of the Galactic Caps will be observed in Y- and H- band as well to be combined with the data from the VST ATLAS survey. The main science drivers of the VHS include: examining low mass and nearby stars, studying the merger history of the Galaxy, measuring the properties of Dark Energy through the examination of large-scale structure to a redshift of ~1, and searches for high redshift quasars.