Astronomical Virtual Observatories Through International Collaboration

Astronomical Virtual Observatories (VOs) are emerging research environment for astronomy, and 16 countries and a region have funded to develop their VOs based on international standard protocols for interoperability. The 16 funded VO projects have established the International Virtual Observatory Al...

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Main Author: Masatoshi Ohishi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2010-03-01
Series:Data Science Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://datascience.codata.org/articles/144
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spelling doaj-12506b3ee0ef413ebeba57718a217bff2020-11-25T00:24:56ZengUbiquity PressData Science Journal1683-14702010-03-01910.2481/dsj.IGY-050144Astronomical Virtual Observatories Through International CollaborationMasatoshi Ohishi0Astronomy Data Center, National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, 2-21-1, Osawa, Mitaka, Tokyo 181-8588 JapanAstronomical Virtual Observatories (VOs) are emerging research environment for astronomy, and 16 countries and a region have funded to develop their VOs based on international standard protocols for interoperability. The 16 funded VO projects have established the International Virtual Observatory Alliance (http://www.ivoa.net/) to develop the standard interoperable interfaces such as registry (meta data), data access, query languages, output format (VOTable), data model, application interface, and so on. The IVOA members have constructed each VO environment through the IVOA interfaces. National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ) started its VO project (Japanese Virtual Observatory - JVO) in 2002, and developed its VO system. We have succeeded to interoperate the latest JVO system with other VOs in the USA and Europe since December 2004. Observed data by the Subaru telescope, satellite data taken by the JAXA/ISAS, etc. are connected to the JVO system. Successful interoperation of the JVO system with other VOs means that astronomers in the world will be able to utilize top-level data obtained by these telescopes from anywhere in the world at anytime. System design of the JVO system, experiences during our development including problems of current standard protocols defined in the IVOA, and proposals to resolve these problems in the near future are described.http://datascience.codata.org/articles/144AstronomyVirtual ObservatoryStandardized InterfaceInternational CollaborationDatabaseGRID
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Masatoshi Ohishi
spellingShingle Masatoshi Ohishi
Astronomical Virtual Observatories Through International Collaboration
Data Science Journal
Astronomy
Virtual Observatory
Standardized Interface
International Collaboration
Database
GRID
author_facet Masatoshi Ohishi
author_sort Masatoshi Ohishi
title Astronomical Virtual Observatories Through International Collaboration
title_short Astronomical Virtual Observatories Through International Collaboration
title_full Astronomical Virtual Observatories Through International Collaboration
title_fullStr Astronomical Virtual Observatories Through International Collaboration
title_full_unstemmed Astronomical Virtual Observatories Through International Collaboration
title_sort astronomical virtual observatories through international collaboration
publisher Ubiquity Press
series Data Science Journal
issn 1683-1470
publishDate 2010-03-01
description Astronomical Virtual Observatories (VOs) are emerging research environment for astronomy, and 16 countries and a region have funded to develop their VOs based on international standard protocols for interoperability. The 16 funded VO projects have established the International Virtual Observatory Alliance (http://www.ivoa.net/) to develop the standard interoperable interfaces such as registry (meta data), data access, query languages, output format (VOTable), data model, application interface, and so on. The IVOA members have constructed each VO environment through the IVOA interfaces. National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ) started its VO project (Japanese Virtual Observatory - JVO) in 2002, and developed its VO system. We have succeeded to interoperate the latest JVO system with other VOs in the USA and Europe since December 2004. Observed data by the Subaru telescope, satellite data taken by the JAXA/ISAS, etc. are connected to the JVO system. Successful interoperation of the JVO system with other VOs means that astronomers in the world will be able to utilize top-level data obtained by these telescopes from anywhere in the world at anytime. System design of the JVO system, experiences during our development including problems of current standard protocols defined in the IVOA, and proposals to resolve these problems in the near future are described.
topic Astronomy
Virtual Observatory
Standardized Interface
International Collaboration
Database
GRID
url http://datascience.codata.org/articles/144
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