The Bochum Galactic Disk Survey is an ongoing project to monitor the
stellar content of the Galactic disk in a 6 degree wide stripe
centered on the Galactic plane. The data has been recorded since
mid-2010 in Sloan r and i simultaneously with the RoBoTT Telecsope at
the Universitaetssternwarte Bochum near Cerro Armazones in the Chilean
Atacama desert. It contains measurements of about 2x10^7 stars over
more than seven years. Additionally, intermittent measurements in
Johnson UVB and Sloan z have been recorded as well.
This service exposes the light curves of stars produced by the Bochum
Galactic Disk Survey; several million light curves are provided in the
SDSS i and r bands. The lightcurves are published per-band and are
also available through obscore.
The Armagh-Dunsink-Harvard Becker-Schmidt Telescope was deployed at
Boyden Station, Maselspoort South Africa between 1965 and 1970. During
that time, astronomers from Bamberg, Heidelberg, Hamburg and Münster
took astronomical images there, with a focus on old star clusters, the
Magellanic clouds, and the southern milky way. This service provides
scans of the plates obtained.
Split spectra from the CALIFA DR3 cubes. This service serves one
spectrum each per pixel in each cube where there is at least one valid
spaxel. Where both V500 and COMB data is available, COMB spectra are
served. WARNING: The individual spectra are not independent. Also,
error estimates over wide spectral ranges based on the error estimates
served here are unreliable.
Coordinated microlensing survey observations with Kepler K2/C9 using
VST
Short Name:
k2c9vst ssap
Date:
23 Mar 2022 13:13:09
Publisher:
The GAVO DC team
Description:
The Kepler satellite has observed the Galactic center in a campaign
lasting from April until the end of June 2016 (K2/C9). The main
objective of the 99 hours for the microlensing program 097.C-0261(A)
using the ESO VLT Survey Telescope (VST) was to monitor the superstamp
(i.e., the actually downloaded region of K2/C9) in service mode for
improving the event coverage and securing some color-information. Due
to weather conditions, the majority of images were taken in the red
band. These are part of the present release.
The exact pointing strategy was adjusted to cover the superstamp with
6 pointings and to contain as many microlensing events from earlier
seasons as possible. In addition, a two-point dither was requested to
reduce the impact of bad pixels and detector gaps. Consequently, some
events were getting more coverage and have been observed with
different CCDs. The large footprint of roughly 1 square degree and the
complementary weather conditions at Cerro Paranal have lead to the
coverage of 147 events (this resource's events table), but ~60 of
those were already at baseline.
Spectra from surveys hosted by Data Central. Most spectra were taken with the multi-object spectroscopy facilities 2dF (Anglo-Australian Telescope) and 6dF (UK Schmidt Telescope).
This is a deep optical mosaic of the Fornax cluster’s core, covering
1.6 square degrees. The data were acquired with ESO/MPG 2.2m/WFI,
using a transparent filter that nearly equals the no-filter throughput
and thus provides a high signal-to-noise ratio. Based on an
approximate conversion to V-band magnitudes, the unbinned and binned
mosaics (0.24 and 0.71 arcsec/pixel) reach a median depth of 26.6 and
27.8 mag/sq.arcsec, respectively.