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- ADS All-Sky Survey
What's Hot in the Heavens? The NASA ADS All-Sky Survey
- ADS All-Sky survey on WorldWide Telescope - adsass. org
ADS All-Sky Survey is a NASA-funded project (+) The ADSASS is a collaboration of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Harvard University, the Strasbourg astronomical Data Center (CDS), and Microsoft Research
- Survey - California Institute of Technology
SPHEREx takes spectral imaging data across the entire sky while operating from low-earty orbit The data gradually accumulates over time to cover the entire sky in 102 near-infrared colors After 25 months of science operations, SPHEREx will deliver all-sky coverage in four independent surveys
- SPHEREx
The First All-Sky Spectral Survey SPHEREx will observe the entire sky multiple times during its planned two-year mission Its overlapping scan strategy will obtain a minimum of four 0 75--5 0 micron spectra at every point along the ecliptic, with much greater redundancy in the deep survey fields at the North and South ecliptic poles
- WISE - Science: All-Sky Survey
In modern times, astronomers use telescopes to survey the entire sky in multiple wavelengths of light These all-sky surveys are fundamental to astronomy, providing the sources that define the normal Universe and giving the context to reveal and understand the interesting abnormal objects
- Two Micron All Sky Survey (2MASS) - IRSA
For users wishing to visualize regions of the sky that are significantly larger than the All-Sky Atlas Images, or that fall close to the edge of an Atlas Image, IRSA has created 6x6 degree 2MASS mosaics
- ADS All-Sky survey on Aladin Lite - adsass. org
ADS All-Sky Survey is a NASA-funded project The ADSASS is a collaboration of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Harvard University, the Strasbourg astronomical Data Center (CDS), and Microsoft Research Data extracted from the SIMBAD database Seamless Astronomy · ADS Labs · CDS · SIMBAD
- All-Sky Automated Survey for Supernovae - Ohio State University
We changed that with our "All-Sky Automated Survey for Supernovae" (ASAS-SN) project, which is now automatically surveying the entire visible sky every night down to about 18th magnitude, more than 50,000 times deeper than human eye
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