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The Future Role of Data Centres in Astronomy1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 April 2016

G. A. Wilkins*
Affiliation:
Royal Greenwich Observatory, Herstmonceux Castle, U.K.

Extract

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There are two main modes of data-centre operation – the passive and the active. In the passive mode the data are received, catalogued and stored, and some are later copied and distributed in response to specific requests. In the past the passive mode has been represented by the many printed volumes of observational data in astronomical libraries, but the techniques of data acquisition are now such that it is often no longer practicable, even if it were desirable, to print the very large amounts of observational data that are now produced by modern instruments. In the active mode of data-centre operation the centre collects data that it considers to be useful, then evaluates, combines and analyses them, and finally publishes the results of this work. In the past the active mode has been common in astronomy, and the general catalogues of stellar data are examples of this mode of operation, but each one has required many years of effort. Modern computer systems can, however, store large amounts of data and can display, manipulate and copy them very quickly; it is now possible to combine data of many different kinds and to analyse them together, with the prospect of giving new knowledge about the systems being studied.

Type
Part V. Existing Facilities and Future Role of Data Centres
Copyright
Copyright © Reidel 1977

Footnotes

1

See also Report of discussions, section 7.

References

1 See also Report of discussions, section 7.