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The Influence of Acquisition Techniques on the Compilation of Astronomical Data
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 April 2016
Extract
With the increasing use of electronic rather than photographic data collection, and on-line minicomputers at the telescope, two factors will necessitate a reconsideration of the way in which data are stored at the telescope.
1) Many of the electronic data collecting methods produce data in a final or semifinal (digital) form and usually with a large dynamic range; high-data-rate digital recording devices at the telescope are increasingly necessary.
2) Minicomputers allow quality control of data and often complete data reduction either in real time or with a very short time delay. We shall consider both these factors in some detail, emphasizing some of the many possibilities inherent in the increasing availability of one- and two-dimensional array detectors and mass storage devices. But let us first briefly examine the “classical” data gathering techniques. As in the later discussion, we shall subdivide the field into high-resolution spectroscopy, low-resolution spectroscopy (including multicolor photometry), surface photometry of extended objects, and positional astronomy.
- Type
- Part II. Acquisition and Processing Techniques
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Reidel 1977