Hubble Space Telescope Snapshots of 3CR Radio Galaxies
Short Name:
HST.3cr
Date:
23 Jul 2020 19:40:22
Publisher:
Space Telescope Science Institute Archive
Description:
The revised 3C catalogue (3CR, Bennett 1962) forms a flux-limited sample of the most radio-powerful sources in the northern hemisphere. Over the decade and a half of HST operation we have performed "snapshot" imaging from the near-IR to the near-UV of a large number of these sources. Most recently we have completed a NICMOS 1.6 micron survey of low-redshift (z less than 0.3) 3CR sources (Madrid et al. 2006, Floyd et al 2008). The fully-reduced data for all 101 sources included in those papers are presented here in numerical order.
Spectra from the following HST instruments are available: GHRS (processed by CADC), FOS (processed by ECF), and STIS (1st order). Separate SSAP services are registered for each instrument.
VO-compatible FITS files were created by MAST staff.
Hubble Space Telescope Ultraviolet Images of the UDF and HDF
Short Name:
HST.udfuv
Date:
22 Jul 2020 22:22:46
Publisher:
Space Telescope Science Institute Archive
Description:
Wavelength coverage of the Hubble Ultra Deep Field (UDF) has been extended to ultraviolet wavelength observations. Observations include ACS-SBC images in the Far-UV {1500 Angstrom} and WFPC2 images in the Near-UV {F300W} during excution of the HST Treasury program 10403 ( PI Harry Teplitz -- California Institute of Technology). Included with this set of data are ACS/SBC observations of the Hubble Deep Field (HDF) North.
The Hubble Ultra Deep Field 2009 (HUDF09) program observations were obtained as HST program 11563 (PI: Garth Illingworth) from August 2009 to February 2011 (Cycle 17). The program uses WFC3/IR as the prime instrument for 192 orbits to image the deep ACS fields that were obtained in the original HUDF (PI: Steven Beckwith) program and in the HUDF05 (PI: Massimo Stiavelli) program.
The data are organized into sets of images by HUDF09 pointing and by passband (WFC3/IR F105W, F125W & F160W). Each image is approximately 3k x 3k pixels in size and a scale of 0.06 arcsec/pixel. All three pointings reside in the GOODS/Chandra South field and each pointing includes a drizzled science image and a weight image.
The International Ultraviolet Explorer (IUE) performed spectrophotometry at high (0.1-0.3 Å) and low (6-7 Å) resolution between 1150 Å and 3200 Å. This service currently provides access to the low dispersion "NEWSIPS" data, reformatted to be VO-compatible.
The International Ultraviolet Explorer (IUE) performed spectrophotometry at high (0.1-0.3 Å) and low (6-7 Å) resolution between 1150 Å and 3200 Å. The data cover a dynamic range of approximately 17 astronomical magnitudes: -2 to 10 for high dispersion; -2 and 14.9 for low dispersion. Over 104,000 ultraviolet spectra were obtained with IUE between January 26, 1978, and September 30, 1996.
Launched in 2009, the Kepler Mission is surveying a region of our galaxy to determine what fraction of stars
in our galaxy have planets and measure the size distribution of those exoplanets.
Although Kepler completed its primary mission to determine the fraction of stars that have planets in 2013,
it is continuing the search, using a more limited survey mode, under the new name K2.
This service is the main Kepler data search.
This interface joins the Kepler Target Catalog (KTC) with other tables to allow users to access the Kepler data archive. Observed Kepler targets are included with their associated data set names. Since most of the Kepler light curve data is still proprietary, public data can be found by searching for release dates earlier than todays date.
The KIC, or Kepler Input Catalog, is the primary source of information about objects observed as part of the ground-based Kepler Spectral Classification Program (SCP) in preparation for the selection of Kepler PI and GO targets. The KIC lists objects down to 21st magnitude, but it is not complete to this limit. Light from only about 1/3 of these 14 million objects falls on the Kepler CCD detector. A small number of the KIC objects are calibration objects distributed across the sky.