Very-high-energy (VHE, E > 100 GeV) gamma-ray telescopes have traditionally conducted science with proprietary data and software. After two decades of operations, they have accumulated thousands of hours of observations whose full scientific exploitation cannot be accomplished by the restricted group of scientists operating these instruments. The advent of a new generation of open gamma-ray observatories and, at the same time, the forthcoming end of their scientific operations, call for the realisation of public archives of their observations. With the objective to facilitate the exchange and dissemination of data from current- and next-generation gamma-ray instruments, the "Data formats for gamma-ray astronomy" (GADF) initiative was formed to provide an open and standardised format for gamma-ray astronomical data. In this contribution, we present the effort to produce data of the Major Atmospheric Gamma-ray Imaging Cherenkov (MAGIC) telescopes in this standardised format. A total of 150 hours of observations of different sources were converted to the GADF format and then validated by analysing them with the open-source software Gammapy and comparing the results obtained against those produced with the MAGIC proprietary software, MARS. The effort to standardise and validate the MAGIC data in an open and shared format constitute the first fundamental milestone towards the realisation of its public data legacy.

Defining the data legacy of the MAGIC telescopes: adopting a standardised data format and open-source analysis tools

Ansoldi S.;Burelli I.;De Lotto B.;Palatiello M.;
2024-01-01

Abstract

Very-high-energy (VHE, E > 100 GeV) gamma-ray telescopes have traditionally conducted science with proprietary data and software. After two decades of operations, they have accumulated thousands of hours of observations whose full scientific exploitation cannot be accomplished by the restricted group of scientists operating these instruments. The advent of a new generation of open gamma-ray observatories and, at the same time, the forthcoming end of their scientific operations, call for the realisation of public archives of their observations. With the objective to facilitate the exchange and dissemination of data from current- and next-generation gamma-ray instruments, the "Data formats for gamma-ray astronomy" (GADF) initiative was formed to provide an open and standardised format for gamma-ray astronomical data. In this contribution, we present the effort to produce data of the Major Atmospheric Gamma-ray Imaging Cherenkov (MAGIC) telescopes in this standardised format. A total of 150 hours of observations of different sources were converted to the GADF format and then validated by analysing them with the open-source software Gammapy and comparing the results obtained against those produced with the MAGIC proprietary software, MARS. The effort to standardise and validate the MAGIC data in an open and shared format constitute the first fundamental milestone towards the realisation of its public data legacy.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11390/1301573
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