All MAST catalog holdings are available via a ConeSearch endpoint.
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Data Release 12 (SDSS DR12) contains all SDSS observations through July 2014. The STScI mirror is available here.
More information on SDSS and this data release are available at http://www.sdss.org/dr12/.
All available missions are listed at http://archive.stsci.edu/vo/mast_services.html.
The TESS Input Catalog is a comprehensive collection of 1.73 billion sources on the sky, providing stellar parameters for evaluation of potential planetary transit signals. It combines sources from many other catalogs, including 2MASS, LAMOST, SuperBlink, HSOY, RAVE, APOGEE, UCAC, KIC, EPIC, Tycho-2, APASS, AllWISE, SDSS, Gaia DR2, and Hipparcos. It was constructed for the TESS mission to serve as a source for selecting targets to observe with the TESS two-minute cadence, and to provide stellar parameter information for evaluating the properties of transit candidates.
MAST catalog holdings are available via Cone Search endpoints. All available missions are listed at http://archive.stsci.edu/vo/mast_services.html.
This service provides access to the TESS input catalog (TIC), currently version 8.2.
The ATLAS All-Sky Stellar Reference Catalog ConeSearch
Short Name:
ATLAS CS
Date:
13 Feb 2020 17:09:38
Publisher:
Space Telescope Science Institute Archive
Description:
All MAST catalog holdings are available via Cone Search endpoints.
This service provides access to the ATLAS All-Sky Stellar Reference Catalog.
The Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS) observes most of the sky every night in search of dangerous asteroids. Its data are also used to search for photometric variability, where sensitivity to variability is limited by photometric accuracy. Since each exposure spans 7.6 deg corner to corner, variations in atmospheric transparency in excess of 0.01 mag are common, and 0.01 mag photometry cannot be achieved by using a constant flat field calibration image. We therefore have assembled an all-sky reference catalog of approximately one billion stars to m~19 from a variety of sources to calibrate each exposure's astrometry and photometry. Gaia DR2 is the source of astrometry for this ATLAS Refcat2. The sources of g, r, i, z photometry include Pan-STARRS DR1, the ATLAS Pathfinder photometry project, ATLAS re-flattened APASS data, SkyMapper DR1, APASS DR9, the Tycho-2 catalog, and the Yale Bright Star Catalog. We have attempted to make this catalog at least 99% complete to m less than 19, including the brightest stars in the sky. We believe that the systematic errors are no larger than 5 millimag RMS, although errors are as large as 20 millimag in small patches near the galactic plane.
All available missions are listed at http://archive.stsci.edu/vo/mast_services.html.
The TESS Input Catalog is a comprehensive collection of 1.73 billion sources on the sky, providing stellar parameters for evaluation of potential planetary transit signals. It combines sources from many other catalogs, including 2MASS, LAMOST, SuperBlink, HSOY, RAVE, APOGEE, UCAC, KIC, EPIC, Tycho-2, APASS, AllWISE, SDSS, Gaia DR2, and Hipparcos. It was constructed for the TESS mission to serve as a source for selecting targets to observe with the TESS two-minute cadence, and to provide stellar parameter information for evaluating the properties of transit candidates.
MAST catalog holdings are available via Cone Search endpoints. All available missions are listed at http://archive.stsci.edu/vo/mast_services.html.
This service provides access to the TESS input catalog (TIC), currently version 8.2
All MAST catalog holdings are available via Cone Search endpoints.
This service provides access to the MAST copy of the UltraVISTA survey:
This is the deepest and narrowest VISTA survey. It is imaging one patch of sky over and over again to unprecedented depths. The science goals of UltraVISTA include studying the first galaxies, understanding the stellar mass build-up during the peak epoch of star formation activity and dust-obscured star formation.
All available missions are listed at http://archive.stsci.edu/vo/mast_services.html.
USNO-B is an all-sky catalog that presents positions, proper motions, magnitudes in various optical
passbands, and star/galaxy estimators for 1,042,618,261 objects derived from 3,643,201,733 separate
observations. The data were obtained from scans of 7435 Schmidt plates taken for the various sky surveys
during the last 50 years. USNO-B1.0 is believed to provide all-sky coverage, completeness down to V = 21,
0>2 astrometric accuracy at J2000, 0.3 mag photometric accuracy in up to five colors, and 85% accuracy for
distinguishing stars from nonstellar objects.
A more detailed description of the construction and contents of the USNO-B1 catalog can be found in Monet et al.
(2003, "The USNO-B Catalog", AJ, 125, 984), http://www.usno.navy.mil/USNO/astrometry/optical-IR-prod/usno-b1.0/resolveuid/41be0c1a4d1a8372289bad3baf27cde5.
A mirror of USNOB exists in the MAST holdings and is thus available as a cone search.
All available catalogs are listed at http://archive.stsci.edu/vo/mast_services.html.
All MAST catalog holdings are available via Cone Search endpoints.
This service provides access to the MAST copy of the VISTA Hemisphere Survey
All available missions are listed at http://archive.stsci.edu/vo/mast_services.html.
All MAST catalog holdings are available via a ConeSearch endpoint.
The Very Large Array (VLA) FIRST -- Faint Images of the Radio Sky at Twenty-cm -- is a project designed to produce the radio equivalent of the Palomar Observatory Sky Survey over 10,000 square degrees of the North and South Galactic Caps. Using the NRAO Very Large Array (VLA) and an automated mapping pipeline, we produce images with 1.8" pixels, a typical rms of 0.15 mJy, and a resolution of 5". At the 1 mJy source detection threshold, there are ~90 sources per square degree, ~35% of which have resolved structure on scales from 2-30". 30% of the sources have counterparts in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey.
The VLA FIRST catalog at MAST was published December 17, 2014. More information is available at http://sundog.stsci.edu
All available missions are listed at http://archive.stsci.edu/vo/mast_services.html.
All MAST catalog holdings are available via Cone Search endpoints.
This service provides access to the MAST copy of the VST Atlas:
This survey is targeting 4500 square degrees of the Southern sky in five filters (U, V, R, I and Z) to depths comparable to those of the SDSS. This survey is also complemented by near-infrared data from the VISTA Hemisphere Survey. The primary aim is to examine ‘baryon wiggles’ (small-amplitude oscillations observed in the power spectrum of galaxies) by looking at luminous red galaxies in order to determine the dark energy equation of state. Along with this, the VST ATLAS will provide an imaging base for spectroscopic surveys by the VLT.
All available missions are listed at http://archive.stsci.edu/vo/mast_services.html.
All MAST catalog holdings are available via Cone Search endpoints.
This service provides access to the MAST copy of the VST Kilo-degree Infrared Galaxy (VIKING) Survey
All available missions are listed at http://archive.stsci.edu/vo/mast_services.html.