Title: Alex Szalay, JHU
1The National Virtual Observatory Status, Plans
Vision
- Alex Szalay, JHU
- and the NVO Team
2Motivation
- National Academy of Sciences Decadal Survey
recommended NVO as highest priority small
(lt100M) project - Several small initiatives recommended by the
committee span both ground and space. The first
among themthe National Virtual Observatory
(NVO)is the committees top priority among the
small initiatives. The NVO will provide a
virtual sky based on the enormous data sets
being created now and the even larger ones
proposed for the future. It will enable a new
mode of research for professional astronomers and
will provide to the public an unparalleled
opportunity for education and discovery. - Astronomy and Astrophysics in the New
Millennium, p. 14
3History
- 1990s NASA wavelength-oriented science archive
centers multiple large ground-based
digital sky survey projects - Apr 1999 Decadal Survey Panel on Theory,
Computation, and Data Discovery met
in Los Alamos - Szalay, Prince, and Alcock coin the name
National Virtual Observatory - Nov 1999 NVO organizational workshop at JHU
- Feb 2000 2nd NVO workshop at NOAO-Tucson
- Jun 2000 conference at Caltech, Towards a
Virtual Observatory - Jun 2000 ad hoc steering committee formed
- Feb 2001 AASC/NAS report Astronomy and
Astrophysics in the New Millennium
released - Apr 2001 Proposal submitted to NSF ITR program,
17 collaborating organizations, led
by A. Szalay (JHU) - Sep 2001 NSF announces proposal selection
- Jan 2003 First NVO science prototypes shown at
Seattle AAS - Jan 2005 First NVO applications released
4The NVO Framework Project
- US NVO Framework development project, funded by
NSF ITR, managed by NSF Astronomy Division, is
entering the 4th year of a 5-year project - Funding is 10M over the 5 years
- 17 organizations (astro, CS, IT) involved
- JHU (PI Alex Szalay), STScI, Caltech (Astro,
IPAC, CACR), HEASARC, SAO, NRAO, NOAO, NCSA,
SDSC, FNAL, USNO... - Discussions/collaboration being extended to
Gemini Science Archive (Aspin), LSST (Axelrod,
Kantor), Keck (Conrad), PANSTARRS (Heasley)
5Community and agency support
- External Advisory Committee has issued very
positive reports (S. Wolff, J. Huchra, R.
Kennicutt, R. Blandford, M. Haynes, T. Hey, C.
Lagoze, S. Karin, P. Messina, E.
Ostriker) - Science Steering Committee advises on priorities
and strategies for community up-take (G.
Djorgovski, P. Pinto, M. Donahue, J. Ulvestad, F.
Hill, B. Wilkes) - NSF support is strong 100 renewal funding,
carry-forward, and augmentations for
international collaboration and Summer School - National facilities providing more on-line
archives and increasing VO compatibility - NASA co-sponsored NVO Summer School, supports VO
integration efforts at NASA data centers and
various VO-related RD efforts through AISRP
grants
6International collaboration
- NVO is co-founder of the International
Virtual Observatory Alliance - IVOA now has 15 member projects
- Adopted a standards process based on W3C
- Forum for discussion and sharing of experience
- IVOA and open archives endorsed by OECD
(Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development) Global Science Forum report on The
Management, Storage, and Utilization of
Astronomical Data in the 21st Century - IVOA created VO Event Working Group 11/22/2004
to support transient event notification protocol
development
http//ivoa.net
7Exposure
- NVO Summer School (Sept. 2004, Aspen) trained 40
students and software developers in VO tools and
technology - Special Session at this AAS meeting Astronomical
Research with the Virtual Observatory includes
several papers based on Summer School projects
(environments of radio galaxies, starburst
galaxies) - IAU Joint Discussion on Future Large Telescopes
and the Virtual Observatory (July 2003, Sydney) - IAU Symposium proposed for 2006 (Prague)
8Boundary Conditions
- Standards driven by evolving new technologies
- Exchange of rich and structured data (XML)
- DB connectivity, Web Services, Grid computing
- Application to astronomy domain
- Data dictionaries (UCDs)
- Data models
- Protocols
- Registries and resource/service discovery
- Provenance, data quality
Boundary conditions
- Dealing with the astronomy legacy
- FITS data format
- Software systems
9The Virtual Observatory is
- International standards to share complex data
- Modular toolkit to work with distributed data
- A simple environment to publish data to
- An essential part of the astronomers toolkit
- World-wide access to astronomy archives
- Resource for education and public outreach
?
10The Virtual Observatory is not
- A replacement for building new telescopes and
instruments - A centralized repository for all astronomy data
- A data quality enforcement organization
11NVO How Will It Work?
- Do not build everything for everybody
- Define commonly used core services
- Build higher level apps/portals on top
- Use the 90-10 rule
- Define the standards and interfaces
- Build the framework
- Build the 10 of services that are used by 90
- Provide the tools and documentation -- users will
build the custom applications they need
12NVO from research to services
- First two years spent on
- Team building
- Defining the standards
- Building prototypes and pilot studies
- Get feedback from astronomy SW community
- Third year
- Define core applications
- Prototypes to services
- Build them
- Document them
13Science prototypes
- Science demonstrations show capabilities of new
infrastructure, motivate and guide technical
developments. For example - Data discovery, multi-? comparisons
- Search for brown dwarfs
- Galaxy morphologies in clusters
- Globular cluster simulations
14First Light
- Jan 2005 the first real applications
- Taking some of the most common tasks
- Discovery and data access
- Analysis and exploration
- Visualization
- Immediate future
- engage the whole astronomy community
15NVO Registry Portal
Find source catalogs, image archives, and other
astronomical resources registered with the NVO
A Registry is a distributed database of Virtual
Observatory resources primarily access services
for catalog, image, and spectral data, but also
descriptions of organizations and data
collections. There are several coordinated
registry implementations that share information
by harvesting each other's resources. This
registry is at STScI in Baltimore, MD.
Searches for resources can be done by keyword, or
advanced queries can be expressed in the SQL
language. The registry is open for humans through
web forms, or machines through SOAP web services.
16DataScope
Discover and explore data in the Virtual
Observatory
Using the NVO DataScope scientists can discover
and explore hundreds of data resources available
in the Virtual Observatory. DataScope uses the
VO registry and VO access protocols to link to
archives and catalogs around the world. Users can
immediately discover what is known about a given
region of the sky they can view survey images
from the radio through the X-ray, explore
archived observations from multiple archives,
find recent articles describing analysis of data
in the region,
find known interesting or peculiar objects and
survey datasets that cover the region. A summary
page provides a quick précis of all of the
available data. Users can download images and
tables for further analysis on their local
machines, or they can go directly to a growing
set of VO enabled analysis tools, including
Aladin, OASIS, VOPlot and VOStat.
17OpenSkyQuery
Cross-match your data with numerous catalogs
OpenSkyQuery allows you to cross-match
astronomical catalogs and select subsets of
catalogs with a general and powerful query
language. You can also import a personal catalog
of objects and cross-match it against selected
databases.
18Spectrum Services
Search, plot, and retrieve SDSS, 2dF, and other
spectra
The Spectrum Services web site is dedicated to
spectrum related VO services. On this site you
will find tools and tutorials on how to access
close to 500,000 spectra from the Sloan Digital
Sky Survey (SDSS DR1) and the 2 degree Field
redshift survey (2dFGRS). The services are open
to everyone to publish their own spectra in the
same framework. Reading the tutorials on XML Web
Services, you can learn how to integrate the 45
GB spectrum and passband database with your
programs with few lines of code.
19Web Enabled Source Identification with
Cross-Matching (WESIX)
Upload images to SExtractor and cross-correlate
the objects found with selected survey catalogs.
This NVO service does source extraction and
cross-matching for any astrometric FITS image.
The user uploads a FITS image, and the remote
service runs the SExtractor software for source
extraction. The resulting catalog can be
cross-matched with any of several major surveys,
and the results returned as a VOTable. The web
page also allows use of Aladin or VOPlot to
visualize results.
20Future VO-enabled science
- NVO applications for 2005-2006 TBD in
consultation with Science Steering Committee - Dynamic time series analysis, period fitting
- VO-Google
- Fast data inventory service
- Flux-recovery service
- Image registration and subtraction services
- VO integration with legacy software systems (web
service interfaces, data access) - Data mining and data federation on increasingly
large, distributed databases
21Education and Outreach
- NVO recognized as excellent vehicle for education
and public outreach - NVO EPO Coordinator (C. Christian) developing
partnerships - Virtual Cosmos portal (UC Berkeley, STScI, NOAO,
ESO), NASA AISRP funded - Adler Planetarium CyberSpace
- Learning Technologies WorldWind, NASA Ames
- NVO/SDSS Pre-College Curriculum Support
(http//virtualobservatory.org) - Project Lite (Boston University), NSF funded
(http//lite.bu.edu/) - Planning second EPO workshop for Summer 05
22Ear to the ground
- NSF and NASA working to create joint program
draft RFP could be available by next spring - Build community support from the ground up
- Demonstrations
- Software releases
- Summer School
- EPO partnerships
23Summary
- 10M committed in US, gt40M worldwide, to VO
development - Active international community is working and
meeting regularly to establish the VO - Major archives and catalogs available through the
VO and more coming - First public tools and applications now available
for community use - Community engagement under way
- First research papers utilizing the VO beginning
to appear
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