The MACHO Data Pipeline
Abstract
The MACHO experiment is searching for dark matter in the halo of the Galaxy by monitoring more than 20 million stars in the LMC and Galactic bulge for gravitational microlensing events. The hardware consists of a 50 inch telescope, a two-color 32 megapixel ccd camera, and a network of computers. On clear nights the system generates up to 8 GB of raw data and 1 GB of reduced data. The computer system is responsible for all realtime control tasks, for data reduction, and for storing all data associated with each observation in a data base. The subject of this paper is the software system that handles these functions. It is an integrated system controlled by Petri nets that consists of multiple processes communicating via mailboxes and a bulletin board. The system is highly automated, readily extensible, and incorporates flexible error recovery capabilities. It is implemented with C++ in a Unix environment.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.astro-ph/9508107,
title = {The MACHO Data Pipeline},
author = {T. S. Axelrod and R. A. Allsman and P. J. Quinn and D. P. Bennett and K. C. Freeman and B. A. Peterson and A. W. Rodgers and C. Alcock and K. H. Cook and K. Griest and S. L. Marshall and M. R. Pratt and C. W. Stubbs and W. Sutherland},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:astro-ph/9508107},
year = {2007}
}
Comments
36 pages, 6 Postscript figures, uuencoded compressed tar. Submitted to PASP