Abstract :
I first appreciated the importance of computer standards when I worked at NASA´s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, in the early 1990s. My field, x-ray astronomy, was just three decades old at the time. The first pioneering missions could detect only a handful of bright objects. But their successors-among them the European Space Agency´s European X-ray Observatory Satellite and NASA´s Einstein Observatory -observed thousands of x-ray emitting stars, galaxies, and other cosmic objects. Then came Germany´s Rδntgen Satellite and Japan´s Ginga which added to that swelling collection. My former colleagues at GSFC duly picked such a format: flexible image transport system (FITS). Originally developed for optical and radio data, FITS makes exten sive use of headers and keywords. Like XML, FITS is ex tensible. Whenever a new detector technology comes online, new keywords and data structures are defined within the FITS framework. Granted, someone has to write an instrument-specific program that translates telemetry into FITS, but no one has to take on the more onerous job of rewriting data analysis software.
Keywords :
X-ray astronomy; astronomical instruments; astronomy computing; Einstein Observatory; European X-ray observatory satellite; FITS; Ginga; Rδntgen satellite; flexible image transport system; x-ray astronomy; Standards; data format; flexible image transport system; satellite software; scientific computing;