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Astronomical Data Archiving and Curation Clive Page AstroGrid Project University of Leicester 2004 March 22 Importance of Data Archiving in Astronomy • No observation can be repeated exactly, as the sky is always changing – After a violent event (e.g. supernova explosion) earlier observations are crucial • Observations over a long period can identify – Variability – Proper motions • In recent years all data come in digital form • Important earlier datasets on photographic plates have now mostly been digitised. Principal Data Types in Archives • • • • Raw data from telescopes Observing logs Calibration datasets Calibrated/reduced data: – Images – Spectra – Time-series • Derived data products: – Source catalogues – Sky survey image collections Data Formats • A variety, but FITS format predominates: – FITS can store arrays and tables, and encapsulates data and metadata, but… • Standards have evolved, older FITS files less compatible • Individual observatory conventions also exist • Metadata vital - sometimes to be found only: – In associated software packages or documentation – In the heads of those developing the software Important UK data archive sites • Cambridge - Astronomical Survey Unit (CASU): – INT wide-field survey, APM catalogue, VIZIER mirror, UKIRT archive. In future: WFCAM, VISTA. • Edinburgh – Wide-field Astronomy Unit (WFAU) – SuperCOSMOS images and catalogue, 6df galaxy survey, SLOAN DSS copy. In future: WFCAM, VISTA. • Leicester - Data Archive Service (LEDAS): – EXOSAT, GINGA, ASCA, ROSAT, XMM; Chandra mirror, many optical datasets. In future: SWIFT, SuperWASP source archive. Important UK data archive sites (continued) • Manchester - Jodrell Bank: – Merlin, HI surveys, European VLBI datasets, pulsar catalogues. Future: e-Merlin archive. • Rutherford Laboratory: – World Data Centre for STP, CLUSTER and ISO UK data centres, Starlink software collection and data archive. In future: SuperWASP image archive. • UCL - Mullard Space Science Laboratory: – YOHKOH, SOHO, TRACE, ReSIK and other solar/STP archives. Database management systems • DBMS currently used by UK archives include: – – – – – – – – – BROWSE – written at ESOC/ESTEC in 1980s. DB2 (IBM) Ingres miniSQL – free simple DBMS MySQL – open source, supports many web sites PostgreSQL – open source, good spatial indexing SQL Server (Microsoft) Sybase ASE WFCtools – written at Harvard/SAO for accessing large optical catalogues User access methods • Residual telnet/ssh services – Allows registered users to perform DBMS operations store their own subsets etc. – Mostly obsolescent • FTP access for large downloads • Web interfaces use CGI with Perl, PHP, or Python – Results mostly returned as HTML tables/GIFs, with some FITS and VOtable. • No use (pre-AstroGrid) of XML-based Web Services (Xforms, SOAP, WSDL etc.) Problems – (1) technical • Data storage: thanks to Moore’s Law, new datasets are much bigger than old ones. May get adequate storage for existing data from: – new big projects like WFCAM, SWIFT, e-MERLIN, VISTA? – SRIF funding? • International Virtual Observatory Alliance (IVOA) is developing new standards e.g. for tabular data, registry, query language. – These have to be implemented before fully stable. • DBMS: freeware like MySQL, PostgreSQL improving rapidly, probably adequate. – If not, licence costs may be substantial. • Database middleware (OGSA-DAI, ELDAS) – still developing, not quite ready for large-scale use Problems – (2) structural • Data preservation requires migration to new platforms, new DBMS every few years • Many DBMS in use are incapable of supporting functionality required e.g. no spatial indexing – Also implies migration to new DBMS • AstroGrid (and other VO projects) will supply the middleware, but have no remit (and no funding) to update the archives themselves. • Serious data mining research will require serious processing power near the data stores (e.g. an Astronomical Data Warehouse). Problems – (3) managerial • VO software from AstroGrid includes MySpace: a temporary user space on remote systems. – Optional, but highly desirable because of need to “shift the results not the data” – will sites give space to users unknown to them? – how to administer many ad-hoc groups of users? • Creation of the VO Registry will require considerable input from managers of existing data archives – exact mechanism TBD. Manpower Additional manpower needed for: • Migration of existing data collections to new platforms, and often to new DBMS • Installation of AstroGrid and other VO software • Provision of metadata to the Registry • Implementation and operation of MySpace • Setting up astronomical data warehouse facilities at a few sites Funding problems • SRIF funding is for hardware only, not manpower • AstroGrid2 bid failed to get support for elements of data centre support • PPARC grant applications to support data archiving and curation have an unhappy history: they tend to fall between research and projects funding lines. Summary • Archives have a vital role in astronomy – They are basically in good shape in that no important bits have been lost (as far as I know) – But we have been muddling through • • • • Technical problems look soluble Data storage – we may be able to find enough Much work needed on current archives for them to survive into the VO era. Additional skilled manpower will be essential – sources of support for this are lacking • Continuity is vital for archives – this is a longterm problem with no obvious solution.