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- ID:
- ivo://ia2.inaf.it/tap/projects
- Title:
- INAF IA2 Project Resources TAP Service
- Short Name:
- ia2_projects_tap
- Date:
- 04 Feb 2021 00:01:05
- Publisher:
- IA2
- Description:
- INAF IA2 TAP service dedicated to projects and surveys that are not direct outcome of IA2 managed observatory/telescope archival efforts. Currently serving Exo Mer-Cat.
- ID:
- ivo://ia2.inaf.it/edu/inaf_oats/svas/C14/siap
- Title:
- INAF-OATs SVAS Educational Images SIAP service
- Short Name:
- svasC14siap
- Date:
- 13 Mar 2019 11:32:09
- Publisher:
- IA2
- Description:
- INAF-OATs SVAS Educational Images SIAP service. Le Stelle Vanno A Scuola (SVAS) proposes a modern tool to support teaching of astronomy, through the study and experimentation of its observation methods. SVAS offers to schools and teachers a remote laboratory with which carry out real observation sessions, managed in real time by the students under the supervision of the teacher, in the classroom, and of an astronomer, at the OATs, thanks to the telematic link between the school and the observatory. Students and teachers experience real astronomical observations, through the interactive participation to the different steps of planning, observing and acquiring the data. The project is addressed to 13-18 yr students. Every observation is previously planned together with the teachers, according to age and curriculum of the students, with the aim to maximize the results. The observing activity, lasting about 90 minutes and led by an astronomer of the OATs, can be done during the morning (observation of the Sun) or in the evening (observation of stars, nebulae, clusters and galaxies). SVAS involves the Astronomical Observatory of Trieste (OATs), the school (of every level) and the University of Trieste. SVAS is supported by the Consorzio per l’Incremento degli Studi e delle Ricerche dei Dipartimenti di Fisica e Astronomia dell’Università di Trieste and by the Ministero dell'Istruzione, dell'Università e della Ricerca.
- ID:
- ivo://ia2.inaf.it/hosted/laurino2011/tap
- Title:
- Laurino et al 2011 Catalog of WGE photometric redshifts for SDSS candidate qsos and galaxies
- Short Name:
- wgesdsstap
- Date:
- 06 May 2024 08:19:45
- Publisher:
- IA2
- Description:
- The Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) has observed more than a quarter of the sky over eight years of operations, obtaining multicolor photometry and spectroscopy for ~ 1 million of galaxies. A catalog of photometric redshifts for ~ 2 millions quasars with magnitude r < 20.7 extracted from the SDSS DR7 dataset (D'Abrusco et al, 2009) is provided here. The photometric redshifts and the uncertainty of the estimates for each sources have been calculated using the Weak Gated Expert (WGE) method. The WGE (Laurino et al., submitted to MNRAS) is based on the exploitation of the spectroscopic redshifts for a subset of photometric sources and derives photometric redshifts through a combination of data mining techniques. This method can be applied to different classes of extragalactic sources and is scalable. A set of observational parameters used for the evaluation of photometric redshifts, the estimated photometric redshifts values and some of the most common observational parameters retrieved from the SDSS database have been included in the catalog for the sake of simplicity.
- ID:
- ivo://ia2.inaf.it/hosted/laurino2011/cqsophotoz
- Title:
- Laurino et al 2011 Catalog of WGE photometric redshifts for SDSS candidate quasars
- Date:
- 13 Mar 2019 11:56:43
- Publisher:
- IA2
- Description:
- The Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) has observed more than a quarter of the sky over eight years of operations, obtaining multicolor photometry and spectroscopy for ~ 1 million of galaxies. A catalog of photometric redshifts for ~ 2 millions quasars with magnitude r < 20.7 extracted from the SDSS DR7 dataset (D'Abrusco et al, 2009) is provided here. The photometric redshifts and the uncertainty of the estimates for each sources have been calculated using the Weak Gated Expert (WGE) method. The WGE (Laurino et al., submitted to MNRAS) is based on the exploitation of the spectroscopic redshifts for a subset of photometric sources and derives photometric redshifts through a combination of data mining techniques. This method can be applied to different classes of extragalactic sources and is scalable. A set of observational parameters used for the evaluation of photometric redshifts, the estimated photometric redshifts values and some of the most common observational parameters retrieved from the SDSS database have been included in the catalog for the sake of simplicity.
- ID:
- ivo://ia2.inaf.it/hosted/laurino2011/cqsophotozOptUV
- Title:
- Laurino et al 2011 Catalog of WGE photometric redshifts (optical+UV) for SDSS candidate quasars
- Date:
- 13 Mar 2019 11:56:54
- Publisher:
- IA2
- Description:
- The Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) has observed more than a quarter of the sky over eight years of operations, obtaining multicolor photometry and spectroscopy for ~ 1 million of galaxies, and the GALEX survey is the ultraviolet counterpart of the SDSS. A catalog of photometric redshifts (evaluated using optical and ultraviolet photometry) for ~150000 candidate quasars with magnitude r < 20.7, extracted from the SDSS DR7 dataset (D'Abrusco et al, 2009) and with GALEX counterparts, is provided here. The photometric redshifts and the uncertainty of the estimates for each source have been calculated using the Weak Gated Expert (WGE) method. The WGE (Laurino et al., submitted to MNRAS) is based on the exploitation of the spectroscopic redshifts for a subset of photometric sources and derives photometric redshifts through a combination of data mining techniques. This method can be applied to different classes of extragalactic sources and is scalable. A set of observational parameters used for the evaluation of photometric redshifts, the estimated photometric redshifts values and some of the most common observational parameters retrieved from the SDSS and GALEX databases have been included in the catalog for the sake of simplicity.
- ID:
- ivo://ia2.inaf.it/hosted/laurino2011/galphotoz
- Title:
- Laurino et al 2011 Catalogue of WGE photometric redshifts for SDSS galaxies
- Date:
- 13 Mar 2019 11:57:02
- Publisher:
- IA2
- Description:
- The Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) has observed more than a quarter of the sky over eight years of operations, obtaining multicolor photometry and spectroscopy for ~ 1 million of galaxies. A catalog of photometric redshifts for ~ 32 millions galaxies with magnitude r < 21 extracted from the SDSS DR7 dataset (D'Abrusco et al, 2009) is provided here. The photometric redshifts and the uncertainty of the estimates for each sources have been calculated using the Weak Gated Expert (WGE) method. The WGE (Laurino et al., submitted to MNRAS) is based on the exploitation of the spectroscopic redshifts for a subset of photometric sources and derives photometric redshifts through a combination of data mining techniques. This method can be applied to different classes of extragalactic sources and is scalable. A set of observational parameters used for the evaluation of photometric redshifts, the estimated photometric redshifts values and some of the most common observational parameters retrieved from the SDSS database have been included in the catalog for the sake of simplicity.
- ID:
- ivo://ia2.inaf.it/planck/ercsc/ecc
- Title:
- Planck Early Release Cold Core Catalog @ IA2
- Short Name:
- PlanckERCSCecc
- Date:
- 13 Mar 2019 00:01:14
- Publisher:
- IA2
- Description:
- The Planck Early Release Compact Source Catalogue (ERCSC) is a list of all high reliability sources, both Galactic and extragalactic, derived from the first sky coverage. The data that went into this early release comprise all observations undertaken between 13 August 2009 and 6 June 2010, corresponding to Planck operational days 91-389. Since the Planck scan strategy results in the entire sky being observed every 6 months, the data considered in this release correspond to more than the first sky coverage. The source lists have reliability goals of 90% across the entire sky and > 95% at high Galactic latitude. The goals on photometric accuracy are 30% while the positional accuracy goal translates to a positional root mean square (RMS) uncertainty that is less than 1/5 of the beam full width at half maximum (FWHM). ref.: "Planck Early Results: The Early Release Compact Source Catalog" (ADS BibCode: 2011arXiv1101.2041P)
- ID:
- ivo://ia2.inaf.it/planck/ercsc/f857
- Title:
- Planck Early Release Compact Source Catalog (857GHz) @ IA2
- Short Name:
- PlanckERCSCf857
- Date:
- 13 Mar 2019 00:02:55
- Publisher:
- IA2
- Description:
- The Planck Early Release Compact Source Catalogue (ERCSC) is a list of all high reliability sources, both Galactic and extragalactic, derived from the first sky coverage. The data that went into this early release comprise all observations undertaken between 13 August 2009 and 6 June 2010, corresponding to Planck operational days 91-389. Since the Planck scan strategy results in the entire sky being observed every 6 months, the data considered in this release correspond to more than the first sky coverage. The source lists have reliability goals of 90% across the entire sky and > 95% at high Galactic latitude. The goals on photometric accuracy are 30% while the positional accuracy goal translates to a positional root mean square (RMS) uncertainty that is less than 1/5 of the beam full width at half maximum (FWHM). ref.: "Planck Early Results: The Early Release Compact Source Catalog" (ADS BibCode: 2011arXiv1101.2041P)
- ID:
- ivo://ia2.inaf.it/planck/ercsc/f545
- Title:
- Planck Early Release Compact Source Catalog (545GHz) @ IA2
- Short Name:
- PlanckERCSCf545
- Date:
- 13 Mar 2019 00:02:47
- Publisher:
- IA2
- Description:
- The Planck Early Release Compact Source Catalogue (ERCSC) is a list of all high reliability sources, both Galactic and extragalactic, derived from the first sky coverage. The data that went into this early release comprise all observations undertaken between 13 August 2009 and 6 June 2010, corresponding to Planck operational days 91-389. Since the Planck scan strategy results in the entire sky being observed every 6 months, the data considered in this release correspond to more than the first sky coverage. The source lists have reliability goals of 90% across the entire sky and > 95% at high Galactic latitude. The goals on photometric accuracy are 30% while the positional accuracy goal translates to a positional root mean square (RMS) uncertainty that is less than 1/5 of the beam full width at half maximum (FWHM). ref.: "Planck Early Results: The Early Release Compact Source Catalog" (ADS BibCode: 2011arXiv1101.2041P)
- ID:
- ivo://ia2.inaf.it/planck/ercsc/f353
- Title:
- Planck Early Release Compact Source Catalog (353GHz) @ IA2
- Short Name:
- PlanckERCSCf353
- Date:
- 13 Mar 2019 00:02:39
- Publisher:
- IA2
- Description:
- The Planck Early Release Compact Source Catalogue (ERCSC) is a list of all high reliability sources, both Galactic and extragalactic, derived from the first sky coverage. The data that went into this early release comprise all observations undertaken between 13 August 2009 and 6 June 2010, corresponding to Planck operational days 91-389. Since the Planck scan strategy results in the entire sky being observed every 6 months, the data considered in this release correspond to more than the first sky coverage. The source lists have reliability goals of 90% across the entire sky and > 95% at high Galactic latitude. The goals on photometric accuracy are 30% while the positional accuracy goal translates to a positional root mean square (RMS) uncertainty that is less than 1/5 of the beam full width at half maximum (FWHM). ref.: "Planck Early Results: The Early Release Compact Source Catalog" (ADS BibCode: 2011arXiv1101.2041P)
- ID:
- ivo://ia2.inaf.it/planck/ercsc/f217
- Title:
- Planck Early Release Compact Source Catalog (217GHz) @ IA2
- Short Name:
- PlanckERCSCf217
- Date:
- 13 Mar 2019 00:02:29
- Publisher:
- IA2
- Description:
- The Planck Early Release Compact Source Catalogue (ERCSC) is a list of all high reliability sources, both Galactic and extragalactic, derived from the first sky coverage. The data that went into this early release comprise all observations undertaken between 13 August 2009 and 6 June 2010, corresponding to Planck operational days 91-389. Since the Planck scan strategy results in the entire sky being observed every 6 months, the data considered in this release correspond to more than the first sky coverage. The source lists have reliability goals of 90% across the entire sky and > 95% at high Galactic latitude. The goals on photometric accuracy are 30% while the positional accuracy goal translates to a positional root mean square (RMS) uncertainty that is less than 1/5 of the beam full width at half maximum (FWHM). ref.: "Planck Early Results: The Early Release Compact Source Catalog" (ADS BibCode: 2011arXiv1101.2041P)
- ID:
- ivo://ia2.inaf.it/planck/ercsc/f143
- Title:
- Planck Early Release Compact Source Catalog (143GHz) @ IA2
- Short Name:
- PlanckERCSCf143
- Date:
- 13 Mar 2019 00:02:13
- Publisher:
- IA2
- Description:
- The Planck Early Release Compact Source Catalogue (ERCSC) is a list of all high reliability sources, both Galactic and extragalactic, derived from the first sky coverage. The data that went into this early release comprise all observations undertaken between 13 August 2009 and 6 June 2010, corresponding to Planck operational days 91-389. Since the Planck scan strategy results in the entire sky being observed every 6 months, the data considered in this release correspond to more than the first sky coverage. The source lists have reliability goals of 90% across the entire sky and > 95% at high Galactic latitude. The goals on photometric accuracy are 30% while the positional accuracy goal translates to a positional root mean square (RMS) uncertainty that is less than 1/5 of the beam full width at half maximum (FWHM). ref.: "Planck Early Results: The Early Release Compact Source Catalog" (ADS BibCode: 2011arXiv1101.2041P)
- ID:
- ivo://ia2.inaf.it/planck/ercsc/f100
- Title:
- Planck Early Release Compact Source Catalog (100GHz) @ IA2
- Short Name:
- PlanckERCSCf100
- Date:
- 13 Mar 2019 00:02:05
- Publisher:
- IA2
- Description:
- The Planck Early Release Compact Source Catalogue (ERCSC) is a list of all high reliability sources, both Galactic and extragalactic, derived from the first sky coverage. The data that went into this early release comprise all observations undertaken between 13 August 2009 and 6 June 2010, corresponding to Planck operational days 91-389. Since the Planck scan strategy results in the entire sky being observed every 6 months, the data considered in this release correspond to more than the first sky coverage. The source lists have reliability goals of 90% across the entire sky and > 95% at high Galactic latitude. The goals on photometric accuracy are 30% while the positional accuracy goal translates to a positional root mean square (RMS) uncertainty that is less than 1/5 of the beam full width at half maximum (FWHM). ref.: "Planck Early Results: The Early Release Compact Source Catalog" (ADS BibCode: 2011arXiv1101.2041P)
- ID:
- ivo://ia2.inaf.it/planck/ercsc/f070
- Title:
- Planck Early Release Compact Source Catalog (70GHz) @ IA2
- Short Name:
- PlanckERCSCf070
- Date:
- 13 Mar 2019 00:01:55
- Publisher:
- IA2
- Description:
- The Planck Early Release Compact Source Catalogue (ERCSC) is a list of all high reliability sources, both Galactic and extragalactic, derived from the first sky coverage. The data that went into this early release comprise all observations undertaken between 13 August 2009 and 6 June 2010, corresponding to Planck operational days 91-389. Since the Planck scan strategy results in the entire sky being observed every 6 months, the data considered in this release correspond to more than the first sky coverage. The source lists have reliability goals of 90% across the entire sky and > 95% at high Galactic latitude. The goals on photometric accuracy are 30% while the positional accuracy goal translates to a positional root mean square (RMS) uncertainty that is less than 1/5 of the beam full width at half maximum (FWHM). ref.: "Planck Early Results: The Early Release Compact Source Catalog" (ADS BibCode: 2011arXiv1101.2041P)
- ID:
- ivo://ia2.inaf.it/planck/ercsc/f044
- Title:
- Planck Early Release Compact Source Catalog (44GHz) @ IA2
- Short Name:
- PlanckERCSCf044
- Date:
- 13 Mar 2019 00:01:46
- Publisher:
- IA2
- Description:
- The Planck Early Release Compact Source Catalogue (ERCSC) is a list of all high reliability sources, both Galactic and extragalactic, derived from the first sky coverage. The data that went into this early release comprise all observations undertaken between 13 August 2009 and 6 June 2010, corresponding to Planck operational days 91-389. Since the Planck scan strategy results in the entire sky being observed every 6 months, the data considered in this release correspond to more than the first sky coverage. The source lists have reliability goals of 90% across the entire sky and > 95% at high Galactic latitude. The goals on photometric accuracy are 30% while the positional accuracy goal translates to a positional root mean square (RMS) uncertainty that is less than 1/5 of the beam full width at half maximum (FWHM). ref.: "Planck Early Results: The Early Release Compact Source Catalog" (ADS BibCode: 2011arXiv1101.2041P)
- ID:
- ivo://ia2.inaf.it/planck/ercsc/f030
- Title:
- Planck Early Release Compact Source Catalog (30GHz) @ IA2
- Short Name:
- PlanckERCSCf030
- Date:
- 13 Mar 2019 00:01:37
- Publisher:
- IA2
- Description:
- The Planck Early Release Compact Source Catalogue (ERCSC) is a list of all high reliability sources, both Galactic and extragalactic, derived from the first sky coverage. The data that went into this early release comprise all observations undertaken between 13 August 2009 and 6 June 2010, corresponding to Planck operational days 91-389. Since the Planck scan strategy results in the entire sky being observed every 6 months, the data considered in this release correspond to more than the first sky coverage. The source lists have reliability goals of 90% across the entire sky and > 95% at high Galactic latitude. The goals on photometric accuracy are 30% while the positional accuracy goal translates to a positional root mean square (RMS) uncertainty that is less than 1/5 of the beam full width at half maximum (FWHM). ref.: "Planck Early Results: The Early Release Compact Source Catalog" (ADS BibCode: 2011arXiv1101.2041P)
- ID:
- ivo://ia2.inaf.it/planck/ercsc/esz
- Title:
- Planck Early Release Sunyaev Zel'dovich detected cluster candidates @ IA2
- Short Name:
- PlanckERCSCesz
- Date:
- 13 Mar 2019 00:01:26
- Publisher:
- IA2
- Description:
- The Planck Early Release Compact Source Catalogue (ERCSC) is a list of all high reliability sources, both Galactic and extragalactic, derived from the first sky coverage. The data that went into this early release comprise all observations undertaken between 13 August 2009 and 6 June 2010, corresponding to Planck operational days 91-389. Since the Planck scan strategy results in the entire sky being observed every 6 months, the data considered in this release correspond to more than the first sky coverage. The source lists have reliability goals of 90% across the entire sky and > 95% at high Galactic latitude. The goals on photometric accuracy are 30% while the positional accuracy goal translates to a positional root mean square (RMS) uncertainty that is less than 1/5 of the beam full width at half maximum (FWHM). ref.: "Planck Early Results: The Early Release Compact Source Catalog" (ADS BibCode: 2011arXiv1101.2041P)
- ID:
- ivo://ia2.inaf.it/hosted/dabrusco2009/cqso
- Title:
- [TEST] DAbrusco et al 2009 Catalogue of SDSS Quasar candidates
- Date:
- 13 Mar 2019 11:56:22
- Publisher:
- IA2
- Description:
- [TEST] We present a method for the photometric selection of candidate quasars in multiband surveys. The method makes use of a priori knowledge derived from a subsample of spectroscopic confirmed quasi-stellar objects (QSOs) to map the parameter space. The disentanglement of QSOs candidates and stars is performed in the colour space through the combined use of two algorithms, the probabilistic principal surfaces and the negative entropy clustering, which are for the first time used in an astronomical context. Both methods have been implemented in the VONEURAL package on the Astrogrid Virtual Observatory platform. Even though they belong to the class of the unsupervised clustering tools, the performances of the method are optimized by using the available sample of confirmed quasars and it is therefore possible to learn from any improvement in the available `base of knowledge'. The method has been applied and tested on both optical and optical plus near-infrared data extracted from the visible Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and infrared United Kingdom Infrared Deep Sky Survey-Large Area Survey public data bases. In all cases, the experiments lead to high values of both efficiency and completeness, comparable if not better than the methods already known in the literature. A catalogue of optical candidate QSOs extracted from the SDSS Data Release 7 Legacy photometric data set has been produced and is publicly available at the URL http://voneural.na.infn.it/qso.html.
- ID:
- ivo://ia2.inaf.it/hosted/vipers/ssap
- Title:
- The VIMOS Public Extragalactic Redshift Survey (VIPERS) Spectra
- Short Name:
- VIPERS Spectra
- Date:
- 02 Mar 2015 19:00:00
- Publisher:
- IA2
- Description:
- VIMOS Public Extragalactic Redshift Survey" (VIPERS) is an ongoing ESO Large Program to map in detail the spatial distribution of normal galaxies over an unprecedented volume of the z~1 Universe. VIPERS is using VIMOS at the VLT to measure 100,000 redshifts for galaxies with red magnitude I(AB) brighter than 22.5 over an area of 24 square degrees. At this redshift, VIPERS fills a unique niche in galaxy surveys, optimizing the combination of 5-band accurate photometry from the CFHTLS with the multiplexing capability of VIMOS. A robust color-color pre-selection allows the survey to focus its measurements on the 0.5 <= z <= 1.2 redshift range, yielding an optimal combination of large volume (5 x 107 h-3 Mpc3) and high effective spectroscopic sampling (> 40%). With these figures, the VIPERS data set represents the z~1 equivalent of state-of-the-art "local" (z<=0.2) surveys. VIPERS scientific investigations focus on measurements of large-scale structure and cosmological parameters at an epoch when the Universe was about half its current age. At the same time, the survey can explore the ensemble properties of luminous galaxies, groups and clusters with unprecedented statistical accuracy at these redshifts.