The service is also available through a Web interface, which is best suited for small amount of fields.
The purpose of the remote client application is to enable the creation of batch jobs to retrieve at once large number of fields, or to be integrated into other application software, scripts or automated observing tools and telescopes.
The application is based on the
original software developed at the Space Telescope Science Institute to
retrieve any random part of either:
The First Digitized Sky Survey | DSS-1 | 25 micron scans | 100% complete | |
The Second Digitized Sky Survey | DSS-2 red | 15 micron scans | On-line on 67 DVDs in a juke box | 98% complete |
The Second Digitized Sky Survey | DSS-2 blue | 15 micron scans | 45% complete (will only cover one hemisphere) | |
The Second Digitized Sky Survey | DSS-2 InfraRed | 15 micron scans | 99% complete |
The ESO/ST-ECF Archive has developed the DSS program further to
The DSS application essentially takes coordinates and field of view specifications interactively or from an input file and creates a FITS file that can be viewed, converted or analysed with any astronomical data analysis package.
The ESO/ST-ECF DSS program (version 2.5x), as of July 9, 2018, is supported on Linux x86 64bit hosts.
The Digitized Sky Survey is a collection of Schmidt plates covering
the entire sky. The plates are dated from various epochs within the past
30 years. Those have been scanned electronically and the data has been
lossily compressed and made available on CD-ROMs. There are two groups
of CDs available (102 CD-ROMs, compression 10x; 10 CD-ROMs compression
100x) from the Guide
Star Survey group at the Space Telescope
Science Institute. See below for more technical details regarding the
production and scanning of the material.
The plates for the southern data are from the SERC Southern Sky Survey and from the SERC J Equatorial extension. These are deep (3600s) IIIa-J exposures obtained through a GG 395 filter, except for 94 short (1200s) V-band exposures mostly at low galactic latitudes (|b| <= 15 deg) plus 2 plates covering the LMC and 2 very short (300s) V-band exposures, each centered on one of the Magellanic Clouds.
The northern data (dec >= +6 deg) was obtained from the 1950-1955 epoch Palomar Sky Survey. These are deep 103-E exposures obtained through a red plexiglass filter.
The digitized images have been compressed by a factor of 10, on average, and are extremely faithful to the original data both photometrically and astrometrically.
The Second Digitized Sky Survey consists in the higher resolution scans of several more plate collection in the red, blue, visible and near infrared. When complete, these collections will help produce a 2-billion object catalog, with multiple colors and proper motions. The DSS2 scans have similarly been compressed and written onto CD-Rs for distribution to a few selected sites. Each color requires approximately 400 CDs. The ESO/ST-ECF archive has copied those onto DVD-Rs.
Enter data for first field:
There are two possible set of responses here:
The other option is to use the batch mode: In this case the list of pointings to be retrieved have to be recorded in a file following the syntax above. For example:
f001 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 10 10
f002 8 9 10 -11 12 13.4 7 8
f003 15 16 17.18 -19 20 21.22 20 20
etc...
Assuming the file is called dss1.in, the dss1 application has therefore to be called in the following way:
$ dss1 -i dss1.in
After execution, the following files will be available in the current working directory:
f00106z6.fits f0020446.fits f00301c9.fits
$ dss2dvd blue -i /tmp/dss2.in
If the Digitized Sky Survey southern data was helpful for your research work, the following acknowledgment would be appreciated:
Based on photographic data obtained using The UK Schmidt Telescope. The UK Schmidt Telescope was operated by the Royal Observatory Edinburgh, with funding from the UK Science and Engineering Research Council, until 1988 June, and thereafter by the Anglo-Australian Observatory. Original plate material is copyright (c) of the Royal Observatory Edinburgh and the Anglo-Australian Observatory. The plates were processed into the present compressed digital form with their permission. The Digitized Sky Survey was produced at the Space Telescope Science Institute under US Government grant NAG W-2166.