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JCMT Archive Help: Overview
The JCMT Science Archive is the official
distribution site for observational data obtained with the James
Clerk Maxwell Telescope on Mauna Kea, Hawaii, and is a collaboration
between the Canadian Astronomy Data
Centre (CADC), Victoria and the James Clerk Maxwell
Telescope (JCMT), Hilo.
System Requirements:
Users should enable Java and Javascript in their web browsers to
experience all of the features of the JCMT Science Archive.
Especially, the download manager requires that Javascript be
enabled. The JCMT Archive makes use of the Centre de Donnees
astronomiques de Strasbourg's Aladin Java applet for previews so you
will also receive a security warning when you first launch a
preview.
Archive Help: This menu provides information to get
you started. The "Form Help" page contains instructions on how to
fill the forms, including the formats used to select dates, ranges
of values, and coordinate search boxes. In most cases descriptions
of each field in a form can also be retrieved by clicking on the
link attached to the field's label.
Introduction:The "home" page for the JCMT Archive
allows the user to search immediately for processed JCMT data.
These include spectral datacubes produced by ACSIS as well as images
and IQU polarization datacubes taken with the SCUBA camera. Images
from the SCUBA2 camera will be added when they come available.
Each product contains fully calibrated data in FITS format with a
full set of world coordinate system headers. Depending on the
grouping algorithm, each product is the average of raw observations
grouped by project, object name, filter/frequency, observing mode
and date. For a more complete discussion of the processing
procedure for ACSIS and SCUBA-2 products see
Standard Pipeline
Processing, and for the older SCUBA products see
SCUBA Data processing:
Calibration and Associations. Note that ACSIS and SCUBA-2
products remain proprietary as long as the raw data from which they
were derived remains proprietary.
Other options on the "JCMT Queries" menu allow astronomers to find
raw data from the ACSIS, SCUBA-2, SCUBA and SCAN catalogues using
observational criteria like the object name, project ID, and
instrument configuration. Observations using the
ACSIS spectrometer will be proprietary until they pass the
release date assigned by the JCMT. Users authorized to access these
data should log in using their CADC username and password, after
which they will be able to search for and download proprietary data
from all JCMT projects of which they are members. The SCUBA
catalogue includes all observations made with the SCUBA camera,
a continuum bolometer array that worked at submillimetre
wavelengths. The JCMT SCAN catalogue includes all observations
taken with the JCMT in semester 05B or before except those in the
SCUBA catalogue. Most of these observations were taken with
heterodyne receivers, but they also include data taken with the
older continuum detectors like UKT14 and CBE.
All public JCMT data can be downloaded freely from the CADC.
Raw SCUBA, ACSIS and SCUBA2 data are provided in the Starlink Data
Format (SDF) and raw SCAN data in the uncommon GSD format. Software
for processing these data is available from the JCMT and the
interested user is referred to the JCMT web page for more
details.
NOMENCLATURE
New instruments at the JCMT and steady development of tools
for the virtual observatory project, have lead to some new
nomenclature for the archive.
| Instrument Classification | Data in the archive is
better classified by the backend that created the data files than by the
frontend that detected the signal from the sky. |
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- ACSIS
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"Auto-Correlation Spectrometer and Imaging System" is
a versatile multichannel spectrometer can be used for both deep
integration on single points and for large-scale spectral line mapping.
- SCUBA-2
- The successor to the original SCUBA camera,
SCUBA-2 is designed for large-area continuum
mapping and photometry at submm wavelengths.
- SCUBA
- The original Submm Common User Bolometer Array
(SCUBA), retired in 2005, was the first large-format continuum
camera for mapping and photometry at submm wavelengths.
- SCAN
- For semesters 05B and earlier, all JCMT
observations that did not use SCUBA are collectively referred to as
SCAN data. The majority of these are spectral line observations
taken with the DAS and AOSC backends and with one of the suite of
spectral line receivers (RXA, RXB, etc.). However, they also
include continuum observations taken with UKT14, calibration
observations (pointing, focus, etc.) that were taken with the
Continuum Back End (CBE), and a miscellaneous collection of
special-purpose observations with other combinations of receivers
and backends.
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| Data Reduction | Files are
grouped in the archive primarily by the way they are handled in the
data reduction system.
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- PRODUCT
- The ORAC-DR data
reduction pipeline can be used to transform raw data files into a
number of different kinds of reduced data products, such as images
and IQU polarization datacubes for SCUBA, or spectral datacubes for
ACSIS.
- GROUPING ALGORITHMS and ASSOCIATIONs
- Raw data can be
grouped in a variety of useful ways:
- obs : one observation at a time
- night : all observations of a source for a
particular project, wavelength and observing mode on a given
night
- project : all observations of a source for a
particular project, wavelength and observing mode in a semester
- public : all public observations of a source for a
particular wavelength and observing mode
For ACSIS, the obs, night and project products will be generated as
the data arrives in the archive and will be available to authorized
project members along with the raw data during the proprietary
period. The obs and night products are primarily intended to allow
project members to assess the quality of newly available data, but
are intended to be of publication quality by themselves if no
further observations are made of that source.
For SCUBA, only the project products have been generated, because
these correspond most closely to the products previously available
from the archive.
- OBSERVATION
- At the JCMT,
an observation is the fundamental unit of data collection and in
times past would result in a single raw data file being stored on the
disk. ACSIS and SCUBA2 will produce too much raw data for every
observation to be contained in a single file, but the JCMT Archive
will preserve the observation as the fundamental organizational unit
for astronomical data.
For use with the tools of the virtual observatory, an observation is
generalized to be a set of data files derived from a particular set
of photons collected at the telescope. For example, a raw SCUBA
file together with its "obs" products would comprise a
simple observation. An observation in this sense
does not necessarily include raw data. Large images, for example,
are normally built up from many smaller images. Similarly, deep
integrations average together many shorter integrations to achieve
better sensitivity. These composite observations
share the raw data from the simple observations that comprise their
membership. The night and project products will be
examples of composite observations.
- PLANE
- Within an observation, files
are grouped into "planes" where each plane is a different view of
the same set of photons. The raw data files comprise the "raw"
plane. Fully calibrated images produced by the standard pipeline
comprise the "reduced" plane. Other planes may contain previews, or
catalogs derived from the images in the reduced plane.
To keep files within a manageable size, large images or datacubes
may be broken into tiles that are guaranteed not to share more than
a trivial set of photons along the edges of the tiles.
Because ACSIS subsystems can be configured to overlap in frequency,
the raw data for different ACSIS subsystems are always stored in
different planes.
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| Proprietary Data | Most JCMT
data is proprietary to the members of the project group for a period
after the data is taken. |
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- RELEASE DATE
- Each observation is part of a project
and is assigned a release date by the JCMT. Prior to the release
date the observation is proprietary and is accessible only by
members of the project group.
An observation that has passed its release date is public and can be
accessed by anyone. Calibration observations become public
immediately.
- PROJECT GROUP
- Each observing project at the JCMT has a
"project group" of people who are authorized to access the project's
proprietary data before the release date. The membership in the
project group always includes the PI and Co-Is from the original
application, provided they have registered their CADC userids with
the JAC.
- ADMINISTRATION GROUP
- In addition to the project group,
each observing project at the JCMT has an "administration group"
whose members are authorized to add and remove members of the
project group beyond the original PI and Co-Is. PIs are always
members of the administration groups for their projects (provided
that they have registered their CADC userid with the JAC). The JAC
staff can add additional administrators on the request of the PI
(see Proprietary Access
Control under "Archive Help").
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| Queries | There are three
steps needed to find and download a set of data |
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- SEARCH :
- In the UI, the search page is used to set
constraints on the kinds of observations to be sought. For example,
the user might request only observations from a particular project,
or of a particular object like M31 or OriA. For SCUBA products, if
"Group Type" = "Observation", the query will only search for simple
observations, or if "Group Members" > 1, the query will only
search for composite observations with 2 or more members. A typical
query for ACSIS raw data might specify a project ID and a range of
UT dates.
- RESULTS :
- The result of a query will be shown on the
"Search results" page, listing all of the planes that satisfied the
search constraints. Note that the planes can contain more that just
the files selected in the original search. For example, searching
for 450 micron processed SCUBA data will return observations that
contain both 850 and 450 micron images in their "intensity" planes.
For SCAN and SCUBA raw data searches, the Search Results will list
all of the "raw" planes from simple observations that satisfy the
constraints.
The "Download Marked Files" button for processed data proceeds to
the downloadManager page.
- DOWNLOAD :
- The user will be prompted for a location to
store the files in the planes selected for download, and possibly
for authorization to fetch proprietary data. DownloadManager
allows the user to increase the number of download threads for
better performance, and to cancel the download of files that have
not yet been completed.
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