Z |
Name | Schema Table | Database | Description | Type | Length | Unit | Default Value | Unified Content Descriptor |
z |
allwise_sc |
WISE |
Unit sphere position z value |
float |
8 |
|
|
|
zAperMag3 |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR1 |
Default point source Z aperture corrected mag (2.0 arcsec aperture diameter) If in doubt use this flux estimator |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag |
zAperMag3 |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR2 |
Default point source Z aperture corrected mag (2.0 arcsec aperture diameter) If in doubt use this flux estimator |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag |
zAperMag3 |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR3 |
Default point source Z aperture corrected mag (2.0 arcsec aperture diameter) If in doubt use this flux estimator |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMag3 |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR4 |
Default point source Z aperture corrected mag (2.0 arcsec aperture diameter) If in doubt use this flux estimator |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMag3 |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR5 |
Default point source Z aperture corrected mag (2.0 arcsec aperture diameter) If in doubt use this flux estimator |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMag3 |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20131127 |
Default point source Z aperture corrected mag (2.0 arcsec aperture diameter) If in doubt use this flux estimator |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag |
zAperMag3 |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20160425 |
Default point source Z aperture corrected mag (2.0 arcsec aperture diameter) If in doubt use this flux estimator |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMag3 |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20180209 |
Default point source Z aperture corrected mag (2.0 arcsec aperture diameter) If in doubt use this flux estimator |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMag3Err |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR1 |
Error in default point/extended source Z mag (2.0 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error |
zAperMag3Err |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR2 |
Error in default point/extended source Z mag (2.0 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error |
zAperMag3Err |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR3 |
Error in default point/extended source Z mag (2.0 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error;phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMag3Err |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR4 |
Error in default point/extended source Z mag (2.0 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error;phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMag3Err |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR5 |
Error in default point/extended source Z mag (2.0 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error;phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMag3Err |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20131127 |
Error in default point/extended source Z mag (2.0 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error |
zAperMag3Err |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20160425 |
Error in default point/extended source Z mag (2.0 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error;phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMag3Err |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20180209 |
Error in default point/extended source Z mag (2.0 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error;phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMag4 |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR1 |
Point source Z aperture corrected mag (2.8 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag |
zAperMag4 |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR2 |
Point source Z aperture corrected mag (2.8 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag |
zAperMag4 |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR3 |
Point source Z aperture corrected mag (2.8 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMag4 |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR4 |
Point source Z aperture corrected mag (2.8 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMag4 |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR5 |
Point source Z aperture corrected mag (2.8 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMag4 |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20131127 |
Point source Z aperture corrected mag (2.8 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag |
zAperMag4 |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20160425 |
Point source Z aperture corrected mag (2.8 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMag4 |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20180209 |
Point source Z aperture corrected mag (2.8 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMag4Err |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR1 |
Error in point/extended source Z mag (2.8 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error |
zAperMag4Err |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR2 |
Error in point/extended source Z mag (2.8 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error |
zAperMag4Err |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR3 |
Error in point/extended source Z mag (2.8 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error;phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMag4Err |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR4 |
Error in point/extended source Z mag (2.8 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error;phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMag4Err |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR5 |
Error in point/extended source Z mag (2.8 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error;phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMag4Err |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20131127 |
Error in point/extended source Z mag (2.8 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error |
zAperMag4Err |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20160425 |
Error in point/extended source Z mag (2.8 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error;phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMag4Err |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20180209 |
Error in point/extended source Z mag (2.8 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error;phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMag6 |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR1 |
Point source Z aperture corrected mag (5.7 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag |
zAperMag6 |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR2 |
Point source Z aperture corrected mag (5.7 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag |
zAperMag6 |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR3 |
Point source Z aperture corrected mag (5.7 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMag6 |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR4 |
Point source Z aperture corrected mag (5.7 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMag6 |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR5 |
Point source Z aperture corrected mag (5.7 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMag6 |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20131127 |
Point source Z aperture corrected mag (5.7 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag |
zAperMag6 |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20160425 |
Point source Z aperture corrected mag (5.7 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMag6 |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20180209 |
Point source Z aperture corrected mag (5.7 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMag6Err |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR1 |
Error in point/extended source Z mag (5.7 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error |
zAperMag6Err |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR2 |
Error in point/extended source Z mag (5.7 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error |
zAperMag6Err |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR3 |
Error in point/extended source Z mag (5.7 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error;phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMag6Err |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR4 |
Error in point/extended source Z mag (5.7 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error;phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMag6Err |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR5 |
Error in point/extended source Z mag (5.7 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error;phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMag6Err |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20131127 |
Error in point/extended source Z mag (5.7 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error |
zAperMag6Err |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20160425 |
Error in point/extended source Z mag (5.7 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error;phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMag6Err |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20180209 |
Error in point/extended source Z mag (5.7 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error;phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMagNoAperCorr3 |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR1 |
Default extended source Z aperture mag (2.0 arcsec aperture diameter) If in doubt use this flux estimator |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag |
zAperMagNoAperCorr3 |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR2 |
Default extended source Z aperture mag (2.0 arcsec aperture diameter) If in doubt use this flux estimator |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag |
zAperMagNoAperCorr3 |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR3 |
Default extended source Z aperture mag (2.0 arcsec aperture diameter) If in doubt use this flux estimator |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMagNoAperCorr3 |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR4 |
Default extended source Z aperture mag (2.0 arcsec aperture diameter) If in doubt use this flux estimator |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMagNoAperCorr3 |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR5 |
Default extended source Z aperture mag (2.0 arcsec aperture diameter) If in doubt use this flux estimator |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMagNoAperCorr3 |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20131127 |
Default extended source Z aperture mag (2.0 arcsec aperture diameter) If in doubt use this flux estimator |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag |
zAperMagNoAperCorr3 |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20160425 |
Default extended source Z aperture mag (2.0 arcsec aperture diameter) If in doubt use this flux estimator |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMagNoAperCorr3 |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20180209 |
Default extended source Z aperture mag (2.0 arcsec aperture diameter) If in doubt use this flux estimator |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMagNoAperCorr4 |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR1 |
Extended source Z aperture mag (2.8 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag |
zAperMagNoAperCorr4 |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR2 |
Extended source Z aperture mag (2.8 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag |
zAperMagNoAperCorr4 |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR3 |
Extended source Z aperture mag (2.8 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMagNoAperCorr4 |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR4 |
Extended source Z aperture mag (2.8 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMagNoAperCorr4 |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR5 |
Extended source Z aperture mag (2.8 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMagNoAperCorr4 |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20131127 |
Extended source Z aperture mag (2.8 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag |
zAperMagNoAperCorr4 |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20160425 |
Extended source Z aperture mag (2.8 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMagNoAperCorr4 |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20180209 |
Extended source Z aperture mag (2.8 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMagNoAperCorr6 |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR1 |
Extended source Z aperture mag (5.7 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag |
zAperMagNoAperCorr6 |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR2 |
Extended source Z aperture mag (5.7 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag |
zAperMagNoAperCorr6 |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR3 |
Extended source Z aperture mag (5.7 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMagNoAperCorr6 |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR4 |
Extended source Z aperture mag (5.7 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMagNoAperCorr6 |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR5 |
Extended source Z aperture mag (5.7 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMagNoAperCorr6 |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20131127 |
Extended source Z aperture mag (5.7 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag |
zAperMagNoAperCorr6 |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20160425 |
Extended source Z aperture mag (5.7 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAperMagNoAperCorr6 |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20180209 |
Extended source Z aperture mag (5.7 arcsec aperture diameter) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zAverageConf |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR1 |
average confidence in 2 arcsec diameter default aperture (aper3) Z |
real |
4 |
|
-99999999 |
meta.code |
zAverageConf |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR2 |
average confidence in 2 arcsec diameter default aperture (aper3) Z |
real |
4 |
|
-99999999 |
meta.code |
zAverageConf |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR3 |
average confidence in 2 arcsec diameter default aperture (aper3) Z |
real |
4 |
|
-99999999 |
stat.likelihood;em.opt.I |
zAverageConf |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR4 |
average confidence in 2 arcsec diameter default aperture (aper3) Z |
real |
4 |
|
-99999999 |
stat.likelihood;em.opt.I |
zAverageConf |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR5 |
average confidence in 2 arcsec diameter default aperture (aper3) Z |
real |
4 |
|
-99999999 |
stat.likelihood;em.opt.I |
zAverageConf |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20131127 |
average confidence in 2 arcsec diameter default aperture (aper3) Z |
real |
4 |
|
-99999999 |
meta.code |
zAverageConf |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20160425 |
average confidence in 2 arcsec diameter default aperture (aper3) Z |
real |
4 |
|
-99999999 |
stat.likelihood;em.opt.I |
zAverageConf |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20180209 |
average confidence in 2 arcsec diameter default aperture (aper3) Z |
real |
4 |
|
-99999999 |
stat.likelihood;em.opt.I |
zClass |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR1 |
discrete image classification flag in Z |
smallint |
2 |
|
-9999 |
src.class |
zClass |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR2 |
discrete image classification flag in Z |
smallint |
2 |
|
-9999 |
src.class |
zClass |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR3 |
discrete image classification flag in Z |
smallint |
2 |
|
-9999 |
src.class;em.opt.I |
zClass |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR4 |
discrete image classification flag in Z |
smallint |
2 |
|
-9999 |
src.class;em.opt.I |
zClass |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR5 |
discrete image classification flag in Z |
smallint |
2 |
|
-9999 |
src.class;em.opt.I |
zClass |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20131127 |
discrete image classification flag in Z |
smallint |
2 |
|
-9999 |
src.class |
zClass |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20160425 |
discrete image classification flag in Z |
smallint |
2 |
|
-9999 |
src.class;em.opt.I |
zClass |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20180209 |
discrete image classification flag in Z |
smallint |
2 |
|
-9999 |
src.class;em.opt.I |
zClassStat |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR1 |
N(0,1) stellarness-of-profile statistic in Z |
real |
4 |
|
-0.9999995e9 |
stat |
zClassStat |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR2 |
N(0,1) stellarness-of-profile statistic in Z |
real |
4 |
|
-0.9999995e9 |
stat |
zClassStat |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR3 |
N(0,1) stellarness-of-profile statistic in Z |
real |
4 |
|
-0.9999995e9 |
stat;em.opt.I |
zClassStat |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR4 |
N(0,1) stellarness-of-profile statistic in Z |
real |
4 |
|
-0.9999995e9 |
stat;em.opt.I |
zClassStat |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR5 |
N(0,1) stellarness-of-profile statistic in Z |
real |
4 |
|
-0.9999995e9 |
stat;em.opt.I |
zClassStat |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20131127 |
N(0,1) stellarness-of-profile statistic in Z |
real |
4 |
|
-0.9999995e9 |
stat |
zClassStat |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20160425 |
N(0,1) stellarness-of-profile statistic in Z |
real |
4 |
|
-0.9999995e9 |
stat;em.opt.I |
zClassStat |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20180209 |
N(0,1) stellarness-of-profile statistic in Z |
real |
4 |
|
-0.9999995e9 |
stat;em.opt.I |
zd |
twomass_scn |
TWOMASS |
Scan's distance from the zenith at beginning of scan. |
real |
4 |
degrees |
|
stat.fit.residual;pos.az.zd |
zd |
twomass_sixx2_scn |
TWOMASS |
beginning zenith distance of scan data |
real |
4 |
deg |
|
|
zEll |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR1 |
1-b/a, where a/b=semi-major/minor axes in Z |
real |
4 |
|
-0.9999995e9 |
src.ellipticity |
zEll |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR2 |
1-b/a, where a/b=semi-major/minor axes in Z |
real |
4 |
|
-0.9999995e9 |
src.ellipticity |
zEll |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR3 |
1-b/a, where a/b=semi-major/minor axes in Z |
real |
4 |
|
-0.9999995e9 |
src.ellipticity;em.opt.I |
zEll |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR4 |
1-b/a, where a/b=semi-major/minor axes in Z |
real |
4 |
|
-0.9999995e9 |
src.ellipticity;em.opt.I |
zEll |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR5 |
1-b/a, where a/b=semi-major/minor axes in Z |
real |
4 |
|
-0.9999995e9 |
src.ellipticity;em.opt.I |
zEll |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20131127 |
1-b/a, where a/b=semi-major/minor axes in Z |
real |
4 |
|
-0.9999995e9 |
src.ellipticity |
zEll |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20160425 |
1-b/a, where a/b=semi-major/minor axes in Z |
real |
4 |
|
-0.9999995e9 |
src.ellipticity;em.opt.I |
zEll |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20180209 |
1-b/a, where a/b=semi-major/minor axes in Z |
real |
4 |
|
-0.9999995e9 |
src.ellipticity;em.opt.I |
zeNum |
atlasMergeLog |
ATLASDR1 |
the extension number of this Z frame |
tinyint |
1 |
|
|
meta.number |
zeNum |
atlasMergeLog |
ATLASDR2 |
the extension number of this Z frame |
tinyint |
1 |
|
|
meta.number |
zeNum |
atlasMergeLog |
ATLASDR3 |
the extension number of this Z frame |
tinyint |
1 |
|
|
meta.number;em.opt.I |
zeNum |
atlasMergeLog |
ATLASDR4 |
the extension number of this Z frame |
tinyint |
1 |
|
|
meta.number;em.opt.I |
zeNum |
atlasMergeLog |
ATLASDR5 |
the extension number of this Z frame |
tinyint |
1 |
|
|
meta.id;em.opt.I |
zeNum |
atlasMergeLog |
ATLASv20131127 |
the extension number of this Z frame |
tinyint |
1 |
|
|
meta.number |
zeNum |
atlasMergeLog |
ATLASv20160425 |
the extension number of this Z frame |
tinyint |
1 |
|
|
meta.number;em.opt.I |
zeNum |
atlasMergeLog |
ATLASv20180209 |
the extension number of this Z frame |
tinyint |
1 |
|
|
meta.number;em.opt.I |
zeroPoint |
ExternalProduct |
ATLASDR2 |
Zeropoint of each product |
real |
4 |
|
-0.9999995e9 |
|
zeroPoint |
ExternalProduct |
ATLASDR3 |
Zeropoint of each product |
real |
4 |
|
-0.9999995e9 |
|
zeroPoint |
ExternalProduct |
ATLASDR4 |
Zeropoint of each product |
real |
4 |
|
-0.9999995e9 |
|
zeroPoint |
ExternalProduct |
ATLASDR5 |
Zeropoint of each product |
real |
4 |
|
-0.9999995e9 |
|
zeroPoint |
ExternalProduct |
ATLASv20131127 |
Zeropoint of each product |
real |
4 |
|
-0.9999995e9 |
|
zeroPoint |
ExternalProduct |
ATLASv20160425 |
Zeropoint of each product |
real |
4 |
|
-0.9999995e9 |
|
zeroPoint |
ExternalProduct |
ATLASv20180209 |
Zeropoint of each product |
real |
4 |
|
-0.9999995e9 |
|
zeroPoint |
ExternalProduct |
VPHASDR3 |
Zeropoint of each product |
real |
4 |
|
-0.9999995e9 |
|
zeroPoint |
ExternalProduct |
VPHASv20160112 |
Zeropoint of each product |
real |
4 |
|
-0.9999995e9 |
|
zeroPoint |
ExternalProduct |
VPHASv20170222 |
Zeropoint of each product |
real |
4 |
|
-0.9999995e9 |
|
zErrBits |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR1 |
processing warning/error bitwise flags in Z |
int |
4 |
|
-99999999 |
meta.code |
Apparently not actually an error bit flag, but a count of the number of zero confidence pixels in the default (2 arcsec diameter) aperture. |
zErrBits |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR2 |
processing warning/error bitwise flags in Z |
int |
4 |
|
-99999999 |
meta.code |
Apparently not actually an error bit flag, but a count of the number of zero confidence pixels in the default (2 arcsec diameter) aperture. |
zErrBits |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR3 |
processing warning/error bitwise flags in Z |
int |
4 |
|
-99999999 |
meta.code;em.opt.I |
Apparently not actually an error bit flag, but a count of the number of zero confidence pixels in the default (2 arcsec diameter) aperture. |
zErrBits |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR4 |
processing warning/error bitwise flags in Z |
int |
4 |
|
-99999999 |
meta.code;em.opt.I |
Apparently not actually an error bit flag, but a count of the number of zero confidence pixels in the default (2 arcsec diameter) aperture. |
zErrBits |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR5 |
processing warning/error bitwise flags in Z |
int |
4 |
|
-99999999 |
meta.code;em.opt.I |
Apparently not actually an error bit flag, but a count of the number of zero confidence pixels in the default (2 arcsec diameter) aperture. |
zErrBits |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20131127 |
processing warning/error bitwise flags in Z |
int |
4 |
|
-99999999 |
meta.code |
Apparently not actually an error bit flag, but a count of the number of zero confidence pixels in the default (2 arcsec diameter) aperture. |
zErrBits |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20160425 |
processing warning/error bitwise flags in Z |
int |
4 |
|
-99999999 |
meta.code;em.opt.I |
Apparently not actually an error bit flag, but a count of the number of zero confidence pixels in the default (2 arcsec diameter) aperture. |
zErrBits |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20180209 |
processing warning/error bitwise flags in Z |
int |
4 |
|
-99999999 |
meta.code;em.opt.I |
Apparently not actually an error bit flag, but a count of the number of zero confidence pixels in the default (2 arcsec diameter) aperture. |
zEta |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR1 |
Offset of Z detection from master position (+north/-south) |
real |
4 |
arcsec |
-0.9999995e9 |
pos.eq.dec;arith.diff |
When associating individual passband detections into merged sources, a generous (in terms of the positional uncertainties) pairing radius of 1.0 arcseconds is used. Such a large association criterion can of course lead to spurious pairings in the merged sources lists (although note that between passband pairs, handshake pairing is done: both passbands must agree that the candidate pair is their nearest neighbour for the pair to propagate through into the merged source table). In order to help filter spurious pairings out, and assuming that large positional offsets between the different passband detections are not expected (e.g. because of source motion, or larger than usual positional uncertainties) then the attributes Xi and Eta can be used to filter any pairings with suspiciously large offsets in one or more bands. For example, for a clean sample of QSOs from the VHS, you might wish to insist that the offsets in the selected sample are all below 0.5 arcsecond: simply add WHERE clauses into the SQL sample selection script to exclude all Xi and Eta values larger than the threshold you want. NB: the master position is the position of the detection in the shortest passband in the set, rather than the ra/dec of the source as stored in source attributes of the same name. The former is used in the pairing process, while the latter is generally the optimally weighted mean position from an astrometric solution or other combinatorial process of all individual detection positions across the available passbands. |
zEta |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR2 |
Offset of Z detection from master position (+north/-south) |
real |
4 |
arcsec |
-0.9999995e9 |
pos.eq.dec;arith.diff |
When associating individual passband detections into merged sources, a generous (in terms of the positional uncertainties) pairing radius of 1.0 arcseconds is used. Such a large association criterion can of course lead to spurious pairings in the merged sources lists (although note that between passband pairs, handshake pairing is done: both passbands must agree that the candidate pair is their nearest neighbour for the pair to propagate through into the merged source table). In order to help filter spurious pairings out, and assuming that large positional offsets between the different passband detections are not expected (e.g. because of source motion, or larger than usual positional uncertainties) then the attributes Xi and Eta can be used to filter any pairings with suspiciously large offsets in one or more bands. For example, for a clean sample of QSOs from the VHS, you might wish to insist that the offsets in the selected sample are all below 0.5 arcsecond: simply add WHERE clauses into the SQL sample selection script to exclude all Xi and Eta values larger than the threshold you want. NB: the master position is the position of the detection in the shortest passband in the set, rather than the ra/dec of the source as stored in source attributes of the same name. The former is used in the pairing process, while the latter is generally the optimally weighted mean position from an astrometric solution or other combinatorial process of all individual detection positions across the available passbands. |
zEta |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR3 |
Offset of Z detection from master position (+north/-south) |
real |
4 |
arcsec |
-0.9999995e9 |
pos.eq.dec;arith.diff;em.opt.I |
When associating individual passband detections into merged sources, a generous (in terms of the positional uncertainties) pairing radius of 1.0 arcseconds is used. Such a large association criterion can of course lead to spurious pairings in the merged sources lists (although note that between passband pairs, handshake pairing is done: both passbands must agree that the candidate pair is their nearest neighbour for the pair to propagate through into the merged source table). In order to help filter spurious pairings out, and assuming that large positional offsets between the different passband detections are not expected (e.g. because of source motion, or larger than usual positional uncertainties) then the attributes Xi and Eta can be used to filter any pairings with suspiciously large offsets in one or more bands. For example, for a clean sample of QSOs from the VHS, you might wish to insist that the offsets in the selected sample are all below 0.5 arcsecond: simply add WHERE clauses into the SQL sample selection script to exclude all Xi and Eta values larger than the threshold you want. NB: the master position is the position of the detection in the shortest passband in the set, rather than the ra/dec of the source as stored in source attributes of the same name. The former is used in the pairing process, while the latter is generally the optimally weighted mean position from an astrometric solution or other combinatorial process of all individual detection positions across the available passbands. |
zEta |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR4 |
Offset of Z detection from master position (+north/-south) |
real |
4 |
arcsec |
-0.9999995e9 |
pos.eq.dec;arith.diff;em.opt.I |
When associating individual passband detections into merged sources, a generous (in terms of the positional uncertainties) pairing radius of 1.0 arcseconds is used. Such a large association criterion can of course lead to spurious pairings in the merged sources lists (although note that between passband pairs, handshake pairing is done: both passbands must agree that the candidate pair is their nearest neighbour for the pair to propagate through into the merged source table). In order to help filter spurious pairings out, and assuming that large positional offsets between the different passband detections are not expected (e.g. because of source motion, or larger than usual positional uncertainties) then the attributes Xi and Eta can be used to filter any pairings with suspiciously large offsets in one or more bands. For example, for a clean sample of QSOs from the VHS, you might wish to insist that the offsets in the selected sample are all below 0.5 arcsecond: simply add WHERE clauses into the SQL sample selection script to exclude all Xi and Eta values larger than the threshold you want. NB: the master position is the position of the detection in the shortest passband in the set, rather than the ra/dec of the source as stored in source attributes of the same name. The former is used in the pairing process, while the latter is generally the optimally weighted mean position from an astrometric solution or other combinatorial process of all individual detection positions across the available passbands. |
zEta |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR5 |
Offset of Z detection from master position (+north/-south) |
real |
4 |
arcsec |
-0.9999995e9 |
pos.eq.dec;arith.diff;em.opt.I |
When associating individual passband detections into merged sources, a generous (in terms of the positional uncertainties) pairing radius of 1.0 arcseconds is used. Such a large association criterion can of course lead to spurious pairings in the merged sources lists (although note that between passband pairs, handshake pairing is done: both passbands must agree that the candidate pair is their nearest neighbour for the pair to propagate through into the merged source table). In order to help filter spurious pairings out, and assuming that large positional offsets between the different passband detections are not expected (e.g. because of source motion, or larger than usual positional uncertainties) then the attributes Xi and Eta can be used to filter any pairings with suspiciously large offsets in one or more bands. For example, for a clean sample of QSOs from the VHS, you might wish to insist that the offsets in the selected sample are all below 0.5 arcsecond: simply add WHERE clauses into the SQL sample selection script to exclude all Xi and Eta values larger than the threshold you want. NB: the master position is the position of the detection in the shortest passband in the set, rather than the ra/dec of the source as stored in source attributes of the same name. The former is used in the pairing process, while the latter is generally the optimally weighted mean position from an astrometric solution or other combinatorial process of all individual detection positions across the available passbands. |
zEta |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20131127 |
Offset of Z detection from master position (+north/-south) |
real |
4 |
arcsec |
-0.9999995e9 |
pos.eq.dec;arith.diff |
When associating individual passband detections into merged sources, a generous (in terms of the positional uncertainties) pairing radius of 1.0 arcseconds is used. Such a large association criterion can of course lead to spurious pairings in the merged sources lists (although note that between passband pairs, handshake pairing is done: both passbands must agree that the candidate pair is their nearest neighbour for the pair to propagate through into the merged source table). In order to help filter spurious pairings out, and assuming that large positional offsets between the different passband detections are not expected (e.g. because of source motion, or larger than usual positional uncertainties) then the attributes Xi and Eta can be used to filter any pairings with suspiciously large offsets in one or more bands. For example, for a clean sample of QSOs from the VHS, you might wish to insist that the offsets in the selected sample are all below 0.5 arcsecond: simply add WHERE clauses into the SQL sample selection script to exclude all Xi and Eta values larger than the threshold you want. NB: the master position is the position of the detection in the shortest passband in the set, rather than the ra/dec of the source as stored in source attributes of the same name. The former is used in the pairing process, while the latter is generally the optimally weighted mean position from an astrometric solution or other combinatorial process of all individual detection positions across the available passbands. |
zEta |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20160425 |
Offset of Z detection from master position (+north/-south) |
real |
4 |
arcsec |
-0.9999995e9 |
pos.eq.dec;arith.diff;em.opt.I |
When associating individual passband detections into merged sources, a generous (in terms of the positional uncertainties) pairing radius of 1.0 arcseconds is used. Such a large association criterion can of course lead to spurious pairings in the merged sources lists (although note that between passband pairs, handshake pairing is done: both passbands must agree that the candidate pair is their nearest neighbour for the pair to propagate through into the merged source table). In order to help filter spurious pairings out, and assuming that large positional offsets between the different passband detections are not expected (e.g. because of source motion, or larger than usual positional uncertainties) then the attributes Xi and Eta can be used to filter any pairings with suspiciously large offsets in one or more bands. For example, for a clean sample of QSOs from the VHS, you might wish to insist that the offsets in the selected sample are all below 0.5 arcsecond: simply add WHERE clauses into the SQL sample selection script to exclude all Xi and Eta values larger than the threshold you want. NB: the master position is the position of the detection in the shortest passband in the set, rather than the ra/dec of the source as stored in source attributes of the same name. The former is used in the pairing process, while the latter is generally the optimally weighted mean position from an astrometric solution or other combinatorial process of all individual detection positions across the available passbands. |
zEta |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20180209 |
Offset of Z detection from master position (+north/-south) |
real |
4 |
arcsec |
-0.9999995e9 |
pos.eq.dec;arith.diff;em.opt.I |
When associating individual passband detections into merged sources, a generous (in terms of the positional uncertainties) pairing radius of 1.0 arcseconds is used. Such a large association criterion can of course lead to spurious pairings in the merged sources lists (although note that between passband pairs, handshake pairing is done: both passbands must agree that the candidate pair is their nearest neighbour for the pair to propagate through into the merged source table). In order to help filter spurious pairings out, and assuming that large positional offsets between the different passband detections are not expected (e.g. because of source motion, or larger than usual positional uncertainties) then the attributes Xi and Eta can be used to filter any pairings with suspiciously large offsets in one or more bands. For example, for a clean sample of QSOs from the VHS, you might wish to insist that the offsets in the selected sample are all below 0.5 arcsecond: simply add WHERE clauses into the SQL sample selection script to exclude all Xi and Eta values larger than the threshold you want. NB: the master position is the position of the detection in the shortest passband in the set, rather than the ra/dec of the source as stored in source attributes of the same name. The former is used in the pairing process, while the latter is generally the optimally weighted mean position from an astrometric solution or other combinatorial process of all individual detection positions across the available passbands. |
zGausig |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR1 |
RMS of axes of ellipse fit in Z |
real |
4 |
pixels |
-0.9999995e9 |
src.morph.param |
zGausig |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR2 |
RMS of axes of ellipse fit in Z |
real |
4 |
pixels |
-0.9999995e9 |
src.morph.param |
zGausig |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR3 |
RMS of axes of ellipse fit in Z |
real |
4 |
pixels |
-0.9999995e9 |
src.morph.param;em.opt.I |
zGausig |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR4 |
RMS of axes of ellipse fit in Z |
real |
4 |
pixels |
-0.9999995e9 |
src.morph.param;em.opt.I |
zGausig |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR5 |
RMS of axes of ellipse fit in Z |
real |
4 |
pixels |
-0.9999995e9 |
src.morph.param;em.opt.I |
zGausig |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20131127 |
RMS of axes of ellipse fit in Z |
real |
4 |
pixels |
-0.9999995e9 |
src.morph.param |
zGausig |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20160425 |
RMS of axes of ellipse fit in Z |
real |
4 |
pixels |
-0.9999995e9 |
src.morph.param;em.opt.I |
zGausig |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20180209 |
RMS of axes of ellipse fit in Z |
real |
4 |
pixels |
-0.9999995e9 |
src.morph.param;em.opt.I |
zHlCorSMjRadAs |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR1 |
Seeing corrected half-light, semi-major axis in Z band |
real |
4 |
arcsec |
-0.9999995e9 |
phys.angSize;src |
zHlCorSMjRadAs |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR2 |
Seeing corrected half-light, semi-major axis in Z band |
real |
4 |
arcsec |
-0.9999995e9 |
phys.angSize;src |
zHlCorSMjRadAs |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR3 |
Seeing corrected half-light, semi-major axis in Z band |
real |
4 |
arcsec |
-0.9999995e9 |
phys.angSize;em.opt.I |
zHlCorSMjRadAs |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR4 |
Seeing corrected half-light, semi-major axis in Z band |
real |
4 |
arcsec |
-0.9999995e9 |
phys.angSize;em.opt.I |
zHlCorSMjRadAs |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR5 |
Seeing corrected half-light, semi-major axis in Z band |
real |
4 |
arcsec |
-0.9999995e9 |
phys.angSize;em.opt.I |
zHlCorSMjRadAs |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20131127 |
Seeing corrected half-light, semi-major axis in Z band |
real |
4 |
arcsec |
-0.9999995e9 |
phys.angSize;src |
zHlCorSMjRadAs |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20160425 |
Seeing corrected half-light, semi-major axis in Z band |
real |
4 |
arcsec |
-0.9999995e9 |
phys.angSize;em.opt.I |
zHlCorSMjRadAs |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20180209 |
Seeing corrected half-light, semi-major axis in Z band |
real |
4 |
arcsec |
-0.9999995e9 |
phys.angSize;em.opt.I |
zKronMag |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR4 |
Extended source Z mag (Kron) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zKronMag |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR5 |
Extended source Z mag (Kron) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zKronMag |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20180209 |
Extended source Z mag (Kron) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zKronMagErr |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR4 |
Error in extended source Z mag (Kron) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error;phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zKronMagErr |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR5 |
Error in extended source Z mag (Kron) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error;phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zKronMagErr |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20180209 |
Error in extended source Z mag (Kron) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error;phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zmfID |
atlasMergeLog |
ATLASDR1 |
the UID of the relevant Z multiframe |
bigint |
8 |
|
|
obs.field |
zmfID |
atlasMergeLog |
ATLASDR2 |
the UID of the relevant Z multiframe |
bigint |
8 |
|
|
obs.field |
zmfID |
atlasMergeLog |
ATLASDR3 |
the UID of the relevant Z multiframe |
bigint |
8 |
|
|
meta.id;obs.field;em.opt.I |
zmfID |
atlasMergeLog |
ATLASDR4 |
the UID of the relevant Z multiframe |
bigint |
8 |
|
|
meta.id;obs.field;em.opt.I |
zmfID |
atlasMergeLog |
ATLASDR5 |
the UID of the relevant Z multiframe |
bigint |
8 |
|
|
meta.id;obs.field;em.opt.I |
zmfID |
atlasMergeLog |
ATLASv20131127 |
the UID of the relevant Z multiframe |
bigint |
8 |
|
|
obs.field |
zmfID |
atlasMergeLog |
ATLASv20160425 |
the UID of the relevant Z multiframe |
bigint |
8 |
|
|
meta.id;obs.field;em.opt.I |
zmfID |
atlasMergeLog |
ATLASv20180209 |
the UID of the relevant Z multiframe |
bigint |
8 |
|
|
meta.id;obs.field;em.opt.I |
zMjd |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR3 |
The mean Modified Julian Day of each detection |
float |
8 |
day |
-0.9999995e9 |
time.epoch |
zMjd |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR4 |
The mean Modified Julian Day of each detection |
float |
8 |
day |
-0.9999995e9 |
time.epoch;em.opt.I |
zMjd |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR5 |
The mean Modified Julian Day of each detection |
float |
8 |
day |
-0.9999995e9 |
time.epoch;em.opt.I |
zMjd |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20160425 |
The mean Modified Julian Day of each detection |
float |
8 |
day |
-0.9999995e9 |
time.epoch |
zMjd |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20180209 |
The mean Modified Julian Day of each detection |
float |
8 |
day |
-0.9999995e9 |
time.epoch;em.opt.I |
zPA |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR1 |
ellipse fit celestial orientation in Z |
real |
4 |
Degrees |
-0.9999995e9 |
pos.posAng |
zPA |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR2 |
ellipse fit celestial orientation in Z |
real |
4 |
Degrees |
-0.9999995e9 |
pos.posAng |
zPA |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR3 |
ellipse fit celestial orientation in Z |
real |
4 |
Degrees |
-0.9999995e9 |
pos.posAng;em.opt.I |
zPA |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR4 |
ellipse fit celestial orientation in Z |
real |
4 |
Degrees |
-0.9999995e9 |
pos.posAng;em.opt.I |
zPA |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR5 |
ellipse fit celestial orientation in Z |
real |
4 |
Degrees |
-0.9999995e9 |
pos.posAng;em.opt.I |
zPA |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20131127 |
ellipse fit celestial orientation in Z |
real |
4 |
Degrees |
-0.9999995e9 |
pos.posAng |
zPA |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20160425 |
ellipse fit celestial orientation in Z |
real |
4 |
Degrees |
-0.9999995e9 |
pos.posAng;em.opt.I |
zPA |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20180209 |
ellipse fit celestial orientation in Z |
real |
4 |
Degrees |
-0.9999995e9 |
pos.posAng;em.opt.I |
zPetroMag |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR1 |
Extended source Z mag (Petrosian) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag |
zPetroMag |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR2 |
Extended source Z mag (Petrosian) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag |
zPetroMag |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR3 |
Extended source Z mag (Petrosian) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zPetroMag |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR4 |
Extended source Z mag (Petrosian) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zPetroMag |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR5 |
Extended source Z mag (Petrosian) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zPetroMag |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20131127 |
Extended source Z mag (Petrosian) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag |
zPetroMag |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20160425 |
Extended source Z mag (Petrosian) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zPetroMag |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20180209 |
Extended source Z mag (Petrosian) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zPetroMagErr |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR1 |
Error in extended source Z mag (Petrosian) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error |
zPetroMagErr |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR2 |
Error in extended source Z mag (Petrosian) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error |
zPetroMagErr |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR3 |
Error in extended source Z mag (Petrosian) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error;phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zPetroMagErr |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR4 |
Error in extended source Z mag (Petrosian) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error;phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zPetroMagErr |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR5 |
Error in extended source Z mag (Petrosian) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error;phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zPetroMagErr |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20131127 |
Error in extended source Z mag (Petrosian) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error |
zPetroMagErr |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20160425 |
Error in extended source Z mag (Petrosian) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error;phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zPetroMagErr |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20180209 |
Error in extended source Z mag (Petrosian) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error;phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zPhoto |
twompzPhotoz |
TWOMPZ |
Photometric redshift obtained with the ANNz framework {image primary HDU keyword: zphoto} |
real |
4 |
|
-0.9999995e9 |
|
zppErrBits |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR1 |
additional WFAU post-processing error bits in Z |
int |
4 |
|
0 |
meta.code |
Post-processing error quality bit flags assigned to detections in the archive curation procedure for survey data. From least to most significant byte in the 4-byte integer attribute byte 0 (bits 0 to 7) corresponds to information on generally innocuous conditions that are nonetheless potentially significant as regards the integrity of that detection; byte 1 (bits 8 to 15) corresponds to warnings; byte 2 (bits 16 to 23) corresponds to important warnings; and finally byte 3 (bits 24 to 31) corresponds to severe warnings: Byte | Bit | Detection quality issue | Threshold or bit mask | Applies to | | | | Decimal | Hexadecimal | | 0 | 4 | Deblended | 16 | 0x00000010 | All VDFS catalogues | 0 | 6 | Bad pixel(s) in default aperture | 64 | 0x00000040 | All VDFS catalogues | 0 | 7 | Low confidence in default aperture | 128 | 0x00000080 | All VDFS catalogues | 1 | 12 | Lies within detector 16 region of a tile | 4096 | 0x00001000 | All catalogues from tiles | 2 | 16 | Close to saturated | 65536 | 0x00010000 | All VDFS catalogues | 2 | 17 | Photometric calibration probably subject to systematic error | 131072 | 0x00020000 | VVV only | 2 | 22 | Lies within a dither offset of the stacked frame boundary | 4194304 | 0x00400000 | All catalogues | 2 | 23 | Lies within the underexposed strip (or "ear") of a tile | 8388608 | 0x00800000 | All catalogues from tiles | 3 | 24 | Lies within an underexposed region of a tile due to missing detector | 16777216 | 0x01000000 | All catalogues from tiles | In this way, the higher the error quality bit flag value, the more likely it is that the detection is spurious. The decimal threshold (column 4) gives the minimum value of the quality flag for a detection having the given condition (since other bits in the flag may be set also; the corresponding hexadecimal value, where each digit corresponds to 4 bits in the flag, can be easier to compute when writing SQL queries to test for a given condition). For example, to exclude all Ks band sources in the VHS having any error quality condition other than informational ones, include a predicate ... AND kppErrBits ≤ 255. See the SQL Cookbook and other online pages for further information. |
zppErrBits |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR2 |
additional WFAU post-processing error bits in Z |
int |
4 |
|
0 |
meta.code |
Post-processing error quality bit flags assigned to detections in the archive curation procedure for survey data. From least to most significant byte in the 4-byte integer attribute byte 0 (bits 0 to 7) corresponds to information on generally innocuous conditions that are nonetheless potentially significant as regards the integrity of that detection; byte 1 (bits 8 to 15) corresponds to warnings; byte 2 (bits 16 to 23) corresponds to important warnings; and finally byte 3 (bits 24 to 31) corresponds to severe warnings: Byte | Bit | Detection quality issue | Threshold or bit mask | Applies to | | | | Decimal | Hexadecimal | | 0 | 4 | Deblended | 16 | 0x00000010 | All VDFS catalogues | 0 | 6 | Bad pixel(s) in default aperture | 64 | 0x00000040 | All VDFS catalogues | 0 | 7 | Low confidence in default aperture | 128 | 0x00000080 | All VDFS catalogues | 1 | 12 | Lies within detector 16 region of a tile | 4096 | 0x00001000 | All catalogues from tiles | 2 | 16 | Close to saturated | 65536 | 0x00010000 | All VDFS catalogues | 2 | 17 | Photometric calibration probably subject to systematic error | 131072 | 0x00020000 | VVV only | 2 | 22 | Lies within a dither offset of the stacked frame boundary | 4194304 | 0x00400000 | All catalogues | 2 | 23 | Lies within the underexposed strip (or "ear") of a tile | 8388608 | 0x00800000 | All catalogues from tiles | 3 | 24 | Lies within an underexposed region of a tile due to missing detector | 16777216 | 0x01000000 | All catalogues from tiles | In this way, the higher the error quality bit flag value, the more likely it is that the detection is spurious. The decimal threshold (column 4) gives the minimum value of the quality flag for a detection having the given condition (since other bits in the flag may be set also; the corresponding hexadecimal value, where each digit corresponds to 4 bits in the flag, can be easier to compute when writing SQL queries to test for a given condition). For example, to exclude all Ks band sources in the VHS having any error quality condition other than informational ones, include a predicate ... AND kppErrBits ≤ 255. See the SQL Cookbook and other online pages for further information. |
zppErrBits |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR3 |
additional WFAU post-processing error bits in Z |
int |
4 |
|
0 |
meta.code;em.opt.I |
Post-processing error quality bit flags assigned to detections in the archive curation procedure for survey data. From least to most significant byte in the 4-byte integer attribute byte 0 (bits 0 to 7) corresponds to information on generally innocuous conditions that are nonetheless potentially significant as regards the integrity of that detection; byte 1 (bits 8 to 15) corresponds to warnings; byte 2 (bits 16 to 23) corresponds to important warnings; and finally byte 3 (bits 24 to 31) corresponds to severe warnings: Byte | Bit | Detection quality issue | Threshold or bit mask | Applies to | | | | Decimal | Hexadecimal | | 0 | 4 | Deblended | 16 | 0x00000010 | All VDFS catalogues | 0 | 6 | Bad pixel(s) in default aperture | 64 | 0x00000040 | All VDFS catalogues | 0 | 7 | Low confidence in default aperture | 128 | 0x00000080 | All VDFS catalogues | 1 | 12 | Lies within detector 16 region of a tile | 4096 | 0x00001000 | All catalogues from tiles | 2 | 16 | Close to saturated | 65536 | 0x00010000 | All VDFS catalogues | 2 | 17 | Photometric calibration probably subject to systematic error | 131072 | 0x00020000 | VVV only | 2 | 22 | Lies within a dither offset of the stacked frame boundary | 4194304 | 0x00400000 | All catalogues | 2 | 23 | Lies within the underexposed strip (or "ear") of a tile | 8388608 | 0x00800000 | All catalogues from tiles | 3 | 24 | Lies within an underexposed region of a tile due to missing detector | 16777216 | 0x01000000 | All catalogues from tiles | In this way, the higher the error quality bit flag value, the more likely it is that the detection is spurious. The decimal threshold (column 4) gives the minimum value of the quality flag for a detection having the given condition (since other bits in the flag may be set also; the corresponding hexadecimal value, where each digit corresponds to 4 bits in the flag, can be easier to compute when writing SQL queries to test for a given condition). For example, to exclude all Ks band sources in the VHS having any error quality condition other than informational ones, include a predicate ... AND kppErrBits ≤ 255. See the SQL Cookbook and other online pages for further information. |
zppErrBits |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR4 |
additional WFAU post-processing error bits in Z |
int |
4 |
|
0 |
meta.code;em.opt.I |
Post-processing error quality bit flags assigned to detections in the archive curation procedure for survey data. From least to most significant byte in the 4-byte integer attribute byte 0 (bits 0 to 7) corresponds to information on generally innocuous conditions that are nonetheless potentially significant as regards the integrity of that detection; byte 1 (bits 8 to 15) corresponds to warnings; byte 2 (bits 16 to 23) corresponds to important warnings; and finally byte 3 (bits 24 to 31) corresponds to severe warnings: Byte | Bit | Detection quality issue | Threshold or bit mask | Applies to | | | | Decimal | Hexadecimal | | 0 | 4 | Deblended | 16 | 0x00000010 | All VDFS catalogues | 0 | 6 | Bad pixel(s) in default aperture | 64 | 0x00000040 | All VDFS catalogues | 0 | 7 | Low confidence in default aperture | 128 | 0x00000080 | All VDFS catalogues | 1 | 12 | Lies within detector 16 region of a tile | 4096 | 0x00001000 | All catalogues from tiles | 2 | 16 | Close to saturated | 65536 | 0x00010000 | All VDFS catalogues | 2 | 17 | Photometric calibration probably subject to systematic error | 131072 | 0x00020000 | VVV only | 2 | 22 | Lies within a dither offset of the stacked frame boundary | 4194304 | 0x00400000 | All catalogues | 2 | 23 | Lies within the underexposed strip (or "ear") of a tile | 8388608 | 0x00800000 | All catalogues from tiles | 3 | 24 | Lies within an underexposed region of a tile due to missing detector | 16777216 | 0x01000000 | All catalogues from tiles | In this way, the higher the error quality bit flag value, the more likely it is that the detection is spurious. The decimal threshold (column 4) gives the minimum value of the quality flag for a detection having the given condition (since other bits in the flag may be set also; the corresponding hexadecimal value, where each digit corresponds to 4 bits in the flag, can be easier to compute when writing SQL queries to test for a given condition). For example, to exclude all Ks band sources in the VHS having any error quality condition other than informational ones, include a predicate ... AND kppErrBits ≤ 255. See the SQL Cookbook and other online pages for further information. |
zppErrBits |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR5 |
additional WFAU post-processing error bits in Z |
int |
4 |
|
0 |
meta.code;em.opt.I |
Post-processing error quality bit flags assigned to detections in the archive curation procedure for survey data. From least to most significant byte in the 4-byte integer attribute byte 0 (bits 0 to 7) corresponds to information on generally innocuous conditions that are nonetheless potentially significant as regards the integrity of that detection; byte 1 (bits 8 to 15) corresponds to warnings; byte 2 (bits 16 to 23) corresponds to important warnings; and finally byte 3 (bits 24 to 31) corresponds to severe warnings: Byte | Bit | Detection quality issue | Threshold or bit mask | Applies to | | | | Decimal | Hexadecimal | | 0 | 4 | Deblended | 16 | 0x00000010 | All VDFS catalogues | 0 | 6 | Bad pixel(s) in default aperture | 64 | 0x00000040 | All VDFS catalogues | 0 | 7 | Low confidence in default aperture | 128 | 0x00000080 | All VDFS catalogues | 1 | 12 | Lies within detector 16 region of a tile | 4096 | 0x00001000 | All catalogues from tiles | 2 | 16 | Close to saturated | 65536 | 0x00010000 | All VDFS catalogues | 2 | 17 | Photometric calibration probably subject to systematic error | 131072 | 0x00020000 | VVV only | 2 | 22 | Lies within a dither offset of the stacked frame boundary | 4194304 | 0x00400000 | All catalogues | 2 | 23 | Lies within the underexposed strip (or "ear") of a tile | 8388608 | 0x00800000 | All catalogues from tiles | 3 | 24 | Lies within an underexposed region of a tile due to missing detector | 16777216 | 0x01000000 | All catalogues from tiles | In this way, the higher the error quality bit flag value, the more likely it is that the detection is spurious. The decimal threshold (column 4) gives the minimum value of the quality flag for a detection having the given condition (since other bits in the flag may be set also; the corresponding hexadecimal value, where each digit corresponds to 4 bits in the flag, can be easier to compute when writing SQL queries to test for a given condition). For example, to exclude all Ks band sources in the VHS having any error quality condition other than informational ones, include a predicate ... AND kppErrBits ≤ 255. See the SQL Cookbook and other online pages for further information. |
zppErrBits |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20131127 |
additional WFAU post-processing error bits in Z |
int |
4 |
|
0 |
meta.code |
Post-processing error quality bit flags assigned to detections in the archive curation procedure for survey data. From least to most significant byte in the 4-byte integer attribute byte 0 (bits 0 to 7) corresponds to information on generally innocuous conditions that are nonetheless potentially significant as regards the integrity of that detection; byte 1 (bits 8 to 15) corresponds to warnings; byte 2 (bits 16 to 23) corresponds to important warnings; and finally byte 3 (bits 24 to 31) corresponds to severe warnings: Byte | Bit | Detection quality issue | Threshold or bit mask | Applies to | | | | Decimal | Hexadecimal | | 0 | 4 | Deblended | 16 | 0x00000010 | All VDFS catalogues | 0 | 6 | Bad pixel(s) in default aperture | 64 | 0x00000040 | All VDFS catalogues | 0 | 7 | Low confidence in default aperture | 128 | 0x00000080 | All VDFS catalogues | 1 | 12 | Lies within detector 16 region of a tile | 4096 | 0x00001000 | All catalogues from tiles | 2 | 16 | Close to saturated | 65536 | 0x00010000 | All VDFS catalogues | 2 | 17 | Photometric calibration probably subject to systematic error | 131072 | 0x00020000 | VVV only | 2 | 22 | Lies within a dither offset of the stacked frame boundary | 4194304 | 0x00400000 | All catalogues | 2 | 23 | Lies within the underexposed strip (or "ear") of a tile | 8388608 | 0x00800000 | All catalogues from tiles | 3 | 24 | Lies within an underexposed region of a tile due to missing detector | 16777216 | 0x01000000 | All catalogues from tiles | In this way, the higher the error quality bit flag value, the more likely it is that the detection is spurious. The decimal threshold (column 4) gives the minimum value of the quality flag for a detection having the given condition (since other bits in the flag may be set also; the corresponding hexadecimal value, where each digit corresponds to 4 bits in the flag, can be easier to compute when writing SQL queries to test for a given condition). For example, to exclude all Ks band sources in the VHS having any error quality condition other than informational ones, include a predicate ... AND kppErrBits ≤ 255. See the SQL Cookbook and other online pages for further information. |
zppErrBits |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20160425 |
additional WFAU post-processing error bits in Z |
int |
4 |
|
0 |
meta.code;em.opt.I |
Post-processing error quality bit flags assigned to detections in the archive curation procedure for survey data. From least to most significant byte in the 4-byte integer attribute byte 0 (bits 0 to 7) corresponds to information on generally innocuous conditions that are nonetheless potentially significant as regards the integrity of that detection; byte 1 (bits 8 to 15) corresponds to warnings; byte 2 (bits 16 to 23) corresponds to important warnings; and finally byte 3 (bits 24 to 31) corresponds to severe warnings: Byte | Bit | Detection quality issue | Threshold or bit mask | Applies to | | | | Decimal | Hexadecimal | | 0 | 4 | Deblended | 16 | 0x00000010 | All VDFS catalogues | 0 | 6 | Bad pixel(s) in default aperture | 64 | 0x00000040 | All VDFS catalogues | 0 | 7 | Low confidence in default aperture | 128 | 0x00000080 | All VDFS catalogues | 1 | 12 | Lies within detector 16 region of a tile | 4096 | 0x00001000 | All catalogues from tiles | 2 | 16 | Close to saturated | 65536 | 0x00010000 | All VDFS catalogues | 2 | 17 | Photometric calibration probably subject to systematic error | 131072 | 0x00020000 | VVV only | 2 | 22 | Lies within a dither offset of the stacked frame boundary | 4194304 | 0x00400000 | All catalogues | 2 | 23 | Lies within the underexposed strip (or "ear") of a tile | 8388608 | 0x00800000 | All catalogues from tiles | 3 | 24 | Lies within an underexposed region of a tile due to missing detector | 16777216 | 0x01000000 | All catalogues from tiles | In this way, the higher the error quality bit flag value, the more likely it is that the detection is spurious. The decimal threshold (column 4) gives the minimum value of the quality flag for a detection having the given condition (since other bits in the flag may be set also; the corresponding hexadecimal value, where each digit corresponds to 4 bits in the flag, can be easier to compute when writing SQL queries to test for a given condition). For example, to exclude all Ks band sources in the VHS having any error quality condition other than informational ones, include a predicate ... AND kppErrBits ≤ 255. See the SQL Cookbook and other online pages for further information. |
zppErrBits |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20180209 |
additional WFAU post-processing error bits in Z |
int |
4 |
|
0 |
meta.code;em.opt.I |
Post-processing error quality bit flags assigned to detections in the archive curation procedure for survey data. From least to most significant byte in the 4-byte integer attribute byte 0 (bits 0 to 7) corresponds to information on generally innocuous conditions that are nonetheless potentially significant as regards the integrity of that detection; byte 1 (bits 8 to 15) corresponds to warnings; byte 2 (bits 16 to 23) corresponds to important warnings; and finally byte 3 (bits 24 to 31) corresponds to severe warnings: Byte | Bit | Detection quality issue | Threshold or bit mask | Applies to | | | | Decimal | Hexadecimal | | 0 | 4 | Deblended | 16 | 0x00000010 | All VDFS catalogues | 0 | 6 | Bad pixel(s) in default aperture | 64 | 0x00000040 | All VDFS catalogues | 0 | 7 | Low confidence in default aperture | 128 | 0x00000080 | All VDFS catalogues | 1 | 12 | Lies within detector 16 region of a tile | 4096 | 0x00001000 | All catalogues from tiles | 2 | 16 | Close to saturated | 65536 | 0x00010000 | All VDFS catalogues | 2 | 17 | Photometric calibration probably subject to systematic error | 131072 | 0x00020000 | VVV only | 2 | 22 | Lies within a dither offset of the stacked frame boundary | 4194304 | 0x00400000 | All catalogues | 2 | 23 | Lies within the underexposed strip (or "ear") of a tile | 8388608 | 0x00800000 | All catalogues from tiles | 3 | 24 | Lies within an underexposed region of a tile due to missing detector | 16777216 | 0x01000000 | All catalogues from tiles | In this way, the higher the error quality bit flag value, the more likely it is that the detection is spurious. The decimal threshold (column 4) gives the minimum value of the quality flag for a detection having the given condition (since other bits in the flag may be set also; the corresponding hexadecimal value, where each digit corresponds to 4 bits in the flag, can be easier to compute when writing SQL queries to test for a given condition). For example, to exclude all Ks band sources in the VHS having any error quality condition other than informational ones, include a predicate ... AND kppErrBits ≤ 255. See the SQL Cookbook and other online pages for further information. |
zPsfMag |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR1 |
Point source profile-fitted Z mag |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag |
zPsfMag |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR2 |
Point source profile-fitted Z mag |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag |
zPsfMag |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR3 |
Point source profile-fitted Z mag |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zPsfMag |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20131127 |
Point source profile-fitted Z mag |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag |
zPsfMag |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20160425 |
Point source profile-fitted Z mag |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zPsfMagErr |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR1 |
Error in point source profile-fitted Z mag |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error |
zPsfMagErr |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR2 |
Error in point source profile-fitted Z mag |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error |
zPsfMagErr |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR3 |
Error in point source profile-fitted Z mag |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error;phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zPsfMagErr |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20131127 |
Error in point source profile-fitted Z mag |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error |
zPsfMagErr |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20160425 |
Error in point source profile-fitted Z mag |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error;phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zpSystem |
ExternalProduct |
ATLASDR2 |
System of zeropoint (Vega/AB) |
varchar |
16 |
|
'NONE' |
|
zpSystem |
ExternalProduct |
ATLASDR3 |
System of zeropoint (Vega/AB) |
varchar |
16 |
|
'NONE' |
|
zpSystem |
ExternalProduct |
ATLASDR4 |
System of zeropoint (Vega/AB) |
varchar |
16 |
|
'NONE' |
|
zpSystem |
ExternalProduct |
ATLASDR5 |
System of zeropoint (Vega/AB) |
varchar |
16 |
|
'NONE' |
|
zpSystem |
ExternalProduct |
ATLASv20131127 |
System of zeropoint (Vega/AB) |
varchar |
16 |
|
'NONE' |
|
zpSystem |
ExternalProduct |
ATLASv20160425 |
System of zeropoint (Vega/AB) |
varchar |
16 |
|
'NONE' |
|
zpSystem |
ExternalProduct |
ATLASv20180209 |
System of zeropoint (Vega/AB) |
varchar |
16 |
|
'NONE' |
|
zpSystem |
ExternalProduct |
VPHASDR3 |
System of zeropoint (Vega/AB) |
varchar |
16 |
|
'NONE' |
|
zpSystem |
ExternalProduct |
VPHASv20160112 |
System of zeropoint (Vega/AB) |
varchar |
16 |
|
'NONE' |
|
zpSystem |
ExternalProduct |
VPHASv20170222 |
System of zeropoint (Vega/AB) |
varchar |
16 |
|
'NONE' |
|
zSeqNum |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR1 |
the running number of the Z detection |
int |
4 |
|
-99999999 |
meta.id |
zSeqNum |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR2 |
the running number of the Z detection |
int |
4 |
|
-99999999 |
meta.id |
zSeqNum |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR3 |
the running number of the Z detection |
int |
4 |
|
-99999999 |
meta.number;em.opt.I |
zSeqNum |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR4 |
the running number of the Z detection |
int |
4 |
|
-99999999 |
meta.number;em.opt.I |
zSeqNum |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR5 |
the running number of the Z detection |
int |
4 |
|
-99999999 |
meta.id;em.opt.I |
zSeqNum |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20131127 |
the running number of the Z detection |
int |
4 |
|
-99999999 |
meta.id |
zSeqNum |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20160425 |
the running number of the Z detection |
int |
4 |
|
-99999999 |
meta.number;em.opt.I |
zSeqNum |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20180209 |
the running number of the Z detection |
int |
4 |
|
-99999999 |
meta.number;em.opt.I |
zSerMag2D |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR1 |
Extended source Z mag (profile-fitted) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag |
zSerMag2D |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR2 |
Extended source Z mag (profile-fitted) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag |
zSerMag2D |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR3 |
Extended source Z mag (profile-fitted) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zSerMag2D |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20131127 |
Extended source Z mag (profile-fitted) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag |
zSerMag2D |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20160425 |
Extended source Z mag (profile-fitted) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zSerMag2DErr |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR1 |
Error in extended source Z mag (profile-fitted) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error |
zSerMag2DErr |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR2 |
Error in extended source Z mag (profile-fitted) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error |
zSerMag2DErr |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR3 |
Error in extended source Z mag (profile-fitted) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error;phot.mag;em.opt.I |
zSerMag2DErr |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20131127 |
Error in extended source Z mag (profile-fitted) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error |
zSerMag2DErr |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20160425 |
Error in extended source Z mag (profile-fitted) |
real |
4 |
mag |
-0.9999995e9 |
stat.error;phot.mag;em.opt.I |
ZSOURCE |
mgcBrightSpec |
MGC |
Identifier for best redshift and quality |
varchar |
10 |
|
|
|
zSpec |
twompzPhotoz |
TWOMPZ |
Spectroscopic redshift {image primary HDU keyword: zspec} |
real |
4 |
|
-0.9999995e9 |
|
zXi |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR1 |
Offset of Z detection from master position (+east/-west) |
real |
4 |
arcsec |
-0.9999995e9 |
pos.eq.ra;arith.diff |
When associating individual passband detections into merged sources, a generous (in terms of the positional uncertainties) pairing radius of 1.0 arcseconds is used. Such a large association criterion can of course lead to spurious pairings in the merged sources lists (although note that between passband pairs, handshake pairing is done: both passbands must agree that the candidate pair is their nearest neighbour for the pair to propagate through into the merged source table). In order to help filter spurious pairings out, and assuming that large positional offsets between the different passband detections are not expected (e.g. because of source motion, or larger than usual positional uncertainties) then the attributes Xi and Eta can be used to filter any pairings with suspiciously large offsets in one or more bands. For example, for a clean sample of QSOs from the VHS, you might wish to insist that the offsets in the selected sample are all below 0.5 arcsecond: simply add WHERE clauses into the SQL sample selection script to exclude all Xi and Eta values larger than the threshold you want. NB: the master position is the position of the detection in the shortest passband in the set, rather than the ra/dec of the source as stored in source attributes of the same name. The former is used in the pairing process, while the latter is generally the optimally weighted mean position from an astrometric solution or other combinatorial process of all individual detection positions across the available passbands. |
zXi |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR2 |
Offset of Z detection from master position (+east/-west) |
real |
4 |
arcsec |
-0.9999995e9 |
pos.eq.ra;arith.diff |
When associating individual passband detections into merged sources, a generous (in terms of the positional uncertainties) pairing radius of 1.0 arcseconds is used. Such a large association criterion can of course lead to spurious pairings in the merged sources lists (although note that between passband pairs, handshake pairing is done: both passbands must agree that the candidate pair is their nearest neighbour for the pair to propagate through into the merged source table). In order to help filter spurious pairings out, and assuming that large positional offsets between the different passband detections are not expected (e.g. because of source motion, or larger than usual positional uncertainties) then the attributes Xi and Eta can be used to filter any pairings with suspiciously large offsets in one or more bands. For example, for a clean sample of QSOs from the VHS, you might wish to insist that the offsets in the selected sample are all below 0.5 arcsecond: simply add WHERE clauses into the SQL sample selection script to exclude all Xi and Eta values larger than the threshold you want. NB: the master position is the position of the detection in the shortest passband in the set, rather than the ra/dec of the source as stored in source attributes of the same name. The former is used in the pairing process, while the latter is generally the optimally weighted mean position from an astrometric solution or other combinatorial process of all individual detection positions across the available passbands. |
zXi |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR3 |
Offset of Z detection from master position (+east/-west) |
real |
4 |
arcsec |
-0.9999995e9 |
pos.eq.ra;arith.diff;em.opt.I |
When associating individual passband detections into merged sources, a generous (in terms of the positional uncertainties) pairing radius of 1.0 arcseconds is used. Such a large association criterion can of course lead to spurious pairings in the merged sources lists (although note that between passband pairs, handshake pairing is done: both passbands must agree that the candidate pair is their nearest neighbour for the pair to propagate through into the merged source table). In order to help filter spurious pairings out, and assuming that large positional offsets between the different passband detections are not expected (e.g. because of source motion, or larger than usual positional uncertainties) then the attributes Xi and Eta can be used to filter any pairings with suspiciously large offsets in one or more bands. For example, for a clean sample of QSOs from the VHS, you might wish to insist that the offsets in the selected sample are all below 0.5 arcsecond: simply add WHERE clauses into the SQL sample selection script to exclude all Xi and Eta values larger than the threshold you want. NB: the master position is the position of the detection in the shortest passband in the set, rather than the ra/dec of the source as stored in source attributes of the same name. The former is used in the pairing process, while the latter is generally the optimally weighted mean position from an astrometric solution or other combinatorial process of all individual detection positions across the available passbands. |
zXi |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR4 |
Offset of Z detection from master position (+east/-west) |
real |
4 |
arcsec |
-0.9999995e9 |
pos.eq.ra;arith.diff;em.opt.I |
When associating individual passband detections into merged sources, a generous (in terms of the positional uncertainties) pairing radius of 1.0 arcseconds is used. Such a large association criterion can of course lead to spurious pairings in the merged sources lists (although note that between passband pairs, handshake pairing is done: both passbands must agree that the candidate pair is their nearest neighbour for the pair to propagate through into the merged source table). In order to help filter spurious pairings out, and assuming that large positional offsets between the different passband detections are not expected (e.g. because of source motion, or larger than usual positional uncertainties) then the attributes Xi and Eta can be used to filter any pairings with suspiciously large offsets in one or more bands. For example, for a clean sample of QSOs from the VHS, you might wish to insist that the offsets in the selected sample are all below 0.5 arcsecond: simply add WHERE clauses into the SQL sample selection script to exclude all Xi and Eta values larger than the threshold you want. NB: the master position is the position of the detection in the shortest passband in the set, rather than the ra/dec of the source as stored in source attributes of the same name. The former is used in the pairing process, while the latter is generally the optimally weighted mean position from an astrometric solution or other combinatorial process of all individual detection positions across the available passbands. |
zXi |
atlasSource |
ATLASDR5 |
Offset of Z detection from master position (+east/-west) |
real |
4 |
arcsec |
-0.9999995e9 |
pos.eq.ra;arith.diff;em.opt.I |
When associating individual passband detections into merged sources, a generous (in terms of the positional uncertainties) pairing radius of 1.0 arcseconds is used. Such a large association criterion can of course lead to spurious pairings in the merged sources lists (although note that between passband pairs, handshake pairing is done: both passbands must agree that the candidate pair is their nearest neighbour for the pair to propagate through into the merged source table). In order to help filter spurious pairings out, and assuming that large positional offsets between the different passband detections are not expected (e.g. because of source motion, or larger than usual positional uncertainties) then the attributes Xi and Eta can be used to filter any pairings with suspiciously large offsets in one or more bands. For example, for a clean sample of QSOs from the VHS, you might wish to insist that the offsets in the selected sample are all below 0.5 arcsecond: simply add WHERE clauses into the SQL sample selection script to exclude all Xi and Eta values larger than the threshold you want. NB: the master position is the position of the detection in the shortest passband in the set, rather than the ra/dec of the source as stored in source attributes of the same name. The former is used in the pairing process, while the latter is generally the optimally weighted mean position from an astrometric solution or other combinatorial process of all individual detection positions across the available passbands. |
zXi |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20131127 |
Offset of Z detection from master position (+east/-west) |
real |
4 |
arcsec |
-0.9999995e9 |
pos.eq.ra;arith.diff |
When associating individual passband detections into merged sources, a generous (in terms of the positional uncertainties) pairing radius of 1.0 arcseconds is used. Such a large association criterion can of course lead to spurious pairings in the merged sources lists (although note that between passband pairs, handshake pairing is done: both passbands must agree that the candidate pair is their nearest neighbour for the pair to propagate through into the merged source table). In order to help filter spurious pairings out, and assuming that large positional offsets between the different passband detections are not expected (e.g. because of source motion, or larger than usual positional uncertainties) then the attributes Xi and Eta can be used to filter any pairings with suspiciously large offsets in one or more bands. For example, for a clean sample of QSOs from the VHS, you might wish to insist that the offsets in the selected sample are all below 0.5 arcsecond: simply add WHERE clauses into the SQL sample selection script to exclude all Xi and Eta values larger than the threshold you want. NB: the master position is the position of the detection in the shortest passband in the set, rather than the ra/dec of the source as stored in source attributes of the same name. The former is used in the pairing process, while the latter is generally the optimally weighted mean position from an astrometric solution or other combinatorial process of all individual detection positions across the available passbands. |
zXi |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20160425 |
Offset of Z detection from master position (+east/-west) |
real |
4 |
arcsec |
-0.9999995e9 |
pos.eq.ra;arith.diff;em.opt.I |
When associating individual passband detections into merged sources, a generous (in terms of the positional uncertainties) pairing radius of 1.0 arcseconds is used. Such a large association criterion can of course lead to spurious pairings in the merged sources lists (although note that between passband pairs, handshake pairing is done: both passbands must agree that the candidate pair is their nearest neighbour for the pair to propagate through into the merged source table). In order to help filter spurious pairings out, and assuming that large positional offsets between the different passband detections are not expected (e.g. because of source motion, or larger than usual positional uncertainties) then the attributes Xi and Eta can be used to filter any pairings with suspiciously large offsets in one or more bands. For example, for a clean sample of QSOs from the VHS, you might wish to insist that the offsets in the selected sample are all below 0.5 arcsecond: simply add WHERE clauses into the SQL sample selection script to exclude all Xi and Eta values larger than the threshold you want. NB: the master position is the position of the detection in the shortest passband in the set, rather than the ra/dec of the source as stored in source attributes of the same name. The former is used in the pairing process, while the latter is generally the optimally weighted mean position from an astrometric solution or other combinatorial process of all individual detection positions across the available passbands. |
zXi |
atlasSource |
ATLASv20180209 |
Offset of Z detection from master position (+east/-west) |
real |
4 |
arcsec |
-0.9999995e9 |
pos.eq.ra;arith.diff;em.opt.I |
When associating individual passband detections into merged sources, a generous (in terms of the positional uncertainties) pairing radius of 1.0 arcseconds is used. Such a large association criterion can of course lead to spurious pairings in the merged sources lists (although note that between passband pairs, handshake pairing is done: both passbands must agree that the candidate pair is their nearest neighbour for the pair to propagate through into the merged source table). In order to help filter spurious pairings out, and assuming that large positional offsets between the different passband detections are not expected (e.g. because of source motion, or larger than usual positional uncertainties) then the attributes Xi and Eta can be used to filter any pairings with suspiciously large offsets in one or more bands. For example, for a clean sample of QSOs from the VHS, you might wish to insist that the offsets in the selected sample are all below 0.5 arcsecond: simply add WHERE clauses into the SQL sample selection script to exclude all Xi and Eta values larger than the threshold you want. NB: the master position is the position of the detection in the shortest passband in the set, rather than the ra/dec of the source as stored in source attributes of the same name. The former is used in the pairing process, while the latter is generally the optimally weighted mean position from an astrometric solution or other combinatorial process of all individual detection positions across the available passbands. |