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The ESA's space observatory INTEGRAL (INTErnational Gamma-Ray Astrophysics Laboratory) was launched on October 17, 2002. The OMC (Optical Monitoring Camera) is one of the on-board instruments, designed to obtain V-Johnson photometry from the prime targets of the two INTEGRAL gamma-ray instruments (15 keV-10 MeV) with the support of the X-ray monitor (3-35 keV). OMC offers the first opportunity to make long observations in the optical band simultaneously with those at X-rays and gamma-rays. This capability is particularly important in high-energy astrophysics where variability is typically rapid and unpredictable and will provide invaluable diagnostic information on the nature and the physics of the sources over a broad wavelength range. A full description of the OMC instrument is given in Mas-Hesse et al. (2003).
Since January 2003, LAEFF is developing a scientific archive, containing the data generated by the OMC, and an access system capable of performing complex searches. A remarkable point is the existence of visualization and analysis tools, available from the user's interface, aiming at optimizing the scientific return of the OMC data. The system is opened to the scientific community since November 2003 and can be reached at http://sdc.laeff.esa.es/omc. At the time of writing the system contains 56106 light curves, each of them processed using three different sampling times (1, 630 and 5000 seconds).
The main functionalities of the system are outlined below.
Archive Search: The OMC catalogue (Domingo et al. 2003) comprises 504819 objects. The query to
access the archive is made by means of an HTML fill-in form which
permits to perform queries by object name, coordinates, object type,
V-magnitude range, date of observation, number of points of the
light curve and/or sampling time (see Figure 1). The output data may be ordered by object
name, coordinates, magnitude or date and time of observation. Two
output formats are available: HTML or ASCII.
The system has a built-in name resolver utility which makes possible to query the archive using any of the object names provided by SIMBAD. The name resolver gives more than three million and a half identifications for the astronomical objects contained in the OMC catalogue. The full list of the names associated to a given object can be obtained by simply clicking on the target name in the output form.
The archive contains both public and private data (which becomes public after a period of time) and both types of data can be accessed through the web interface. Security and privacy of the private data are assured in two ways: user authentication and encrypted data transfer. There are several types of user profiles, each of them with different data access policies.
Results from Search: The following utilities are provided in HTML output format to the
users with proper access rights (Figure 2):
Setting of the extraction window size:
The extraction is presently performed using a window of 5 5 pixels wide
centered on the object. This setting is not optimum, for instance, for crowded
fields where stars falling within less than around 50 from the target
source will contaminate the extraction region. Furthermore, crowded fields will
induce a highly structured background leading to lower photometric accuracy
which is of relevance, in particular, for faint stars.
To cope with all possible scenarios the system will offer the possibility of an
on-the-fly data processing with different choices in the size of the extraction
window.
Setting of the sampling time:
The OMC processing pipeline samples the observations at three different
intervals: 1, 630 and 5000 seconds. These samples come from the combination of
consecutive integrations of different duration (currently in cycles of
100, 100, 30, 100 and 10 s). Nevertheless, monitoring of fast variable objects
would require shorter values (even down to 3s) whereas light curves of faint
objects with long-term variability would be improved if longer samples are
chosen. As for the case described in the above paragraph, subsequent releases of
the OMC data server will incorporate a facility to perform on-the-fly data
processing according to the sampling time selected by the user.
Time series analysis:
The operation of INTEGRAL from a high orbit allows a continuous observation
(only interrupted by the radiation belts crossing) for periods of several weeks
giving a unique photometric capability that cannot be addressed from
ground-based observatories. Our aim is that the OMC data server also provides
information in the frequency domain. Given the diversity of the OMC targets
(AGNs, X-rays binaries, gamma-ray burst, eclipsing binaries, pulsating
variables, ...) and the variability patterns (long/short-term
variations, mono/multi-periodicity,...), a detailed study on the techniques to be
applied in each case must be performed.
Data mining. Light curve characterization:
Even though the OMC data server allows making queries by object type based on
the classification provided by SIMBAD, it is clear that this classification can
be greatly improved with the use of the OMC data. Given the vast amount of data
to be handled, classification procedures based on the visual inspection by
experts are not adequate and data mining techniques must be used instead. We are
presently working in a neural network system to classify light curves of
periodic variable stars. The network will be trained with the HIPPARCOS light
curves and, in a first step, it will allow for the automatic classification of
eclipsing binary stars with a further extension to other types of variable stars
(e.g. pulsating variables). The system is designed to perform a unsupervised
topological mapping based on morphological proximity among the light curves.
Domingo, A., Caballero, M. D., Figueras, F. et al. 2003, A&A 411, 281
Mas-Hesse, J. M., Giménez, A., Culhane, L. et al. 2003, A&A 411, 261