Time series data in VOEvent
Arnold Rots
arots at head.cfa.harvard.edu
Tue Jun 12 08:49:51 PDT 2007
Anita,
There is nothing wrong with using "HELIOCENTRIC" if that is what's
being used (although I agree with Steve that its use should not be
encouraged). The real problem occurs when people say "HELIOCENTRIC"
when they really use "BARYCENTRIC" - the difference is significant for
some applications.
Btw, when you say "J2000", do you mean "FK5/J2000" or "ICRS"? ;-)
- Arnold
Anita M. S. Richards wrote:
> On Tue, 12 Jun 2007, Frederic V. Hessman wrote:
> > On 12 Jun 2007, at 3:49 pm, Steve Allen wrote:
> >> Please don't use adjectives "heliocentric" or HJD anymore.
> >> Everything IAU-approved is currently "barycentric".
> >
> > It may be "IAU-approved", but "barycentric" is not unambiguous: a
> > "barycenter" is simply w.r.t. SOME (but not any particular) center-of-mass,
> > so if you want the Solar System we'll have to come up with something like
> >
> > ucd="time.julian;time.barycentric;SolarSystem"
> >
> > (note that NONE of these are UCD1+). The IAU may not used "HJD" anymore,
> > but I know zillions of astronomers who do ;-)
> >
> > Rick
>
> Yes, we have to be careful not to get confused between what we might be
> trying to enforce as journal editors, supervisors/students, etc. etc., and
> what the VO should do. The VO should describe data as accurately as
> necessary - just about everything possible is in STC, so it isn't hard to
> figure out what to use. If significant data use a heliocentric time frame
> then we need to know what it is. I don't know what is worse, to
> mistakenly thnk that there are not data for something because the VO would
> not publish data in the 'wrong' coordinate frame, or if the VO makes an
> assumption that everything is in our favourite frame when in fact it's in
> something different. I am a scrupulous J2000, SI user as approved by the
> IAU, but I guarantee that if I talk about a magnetic field in Tesla or a
> number density in m-3, but did not specify the units, most astronomers
> over 30 think I mean Gauss and cm-3.
>
> We also run into possible conversion problems - I don't know if this
> applies to time, so the VOEvent people can probably ignor the rest of this
> para, but I am often faced with converting Heliocentric velocities into
> VLSR, or B1950 positions into J2000. But in both cases you need to know
> the epoch of observation which is rarely available for old data, if you
> want to be fully accurate. A rule of thumb conversion is good enough for
> registry searches but the actual data returned should be in the original
> units unless the user specifies otherwise - and only converted if the VO
> can do it accurately to within the precisioin of the data (e.g. for IRAS,
> the epoch is less important than for VLBI...)
>
> cheers
> a
>
> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
> Dr. Anita M. S. Richards, AstroGrid Astronomer
> MERLIN/VLBI National Facility, University of Manchester,
> Jodrell Bank Observatory, Macclesfield, Cheshire SK11 9DL, U.K.
> tel +44 (0)1477 572683 (direct); 571321 (switchboard); 571618 (fax).
>
>
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Arnold H. Rots Chandra X-ray Science Center
Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory tel: +1 617 496 7701
60 Garden Street, MS 67 fax: +1 617 495 7356
Cambridge, MA 02138 arots at head.cfa.harvard.edu
USA http://hea-www.harvard.edu/~arots/
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