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Telescope observations, star catalogs, exoplanet surveys, galaxy morphology, gravitational waves, spectroscopy
2,973 datasets
A fairly small dataset of asteroids sourced from the Asterank database. The dataset's author, organization, and specific temporal coverage are not provided. Its size and row count are unknown.
MEE Gaia Catalog Cache is a dataset hosted on Kaggle. Its title suggests it contains astronomical data, likely derived from the European Space Agency's Gaia mission. The dataset's specific content, size, and provenance are not detailed in the available metadata.
Published on Kaggle, this dataset appears to contain data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). The specific time range, volume, and original author are unknown from the provided input. Columns and sample data are unavailable, limiting detailed assessment.
CometCSDGCN appears to be a dataset related to comets, likely for use in astronomical or machine learning research. The title suggests it may contain data structured for Graph Convolutional Networks (GCNs). Published on Kaggle, its specific contents, size, and origin require verification after download.
AccessScience is an authoritative online resource containing educational material covering all major scientific disciplines. The platform is described as a gateway to trustworthy scientific information, curated by author J. Holmes. The specific dataset's size, format, and last update date are unknown.
AccessScience is an authoritative online resource containing educational material covering major scientific disciplines. The dataset likely contains curated scientific information, including content on resonance ionization spectroscopy, authored by Samuel G. Hurst. The platform is described as a continually expanding gateway to core, trustworthy scientific information.
Published on Kaggle, this dataset likely contains information about planets within our solar system and those orbiting other stars. The specific data volume, collection method, and temporal coverage are unknown. The dataset's author, organization, and license details are also unspecified.
NASA Exoplanet Archive Research Snapshot 2026 contains confirmed exoplanets with archive provenance and derived research features. The dataset is hosted on Kaggle, but specific details on its size, structure, and creation date are not provided in the available metadata.
NASA's 2026 catalog of 6,160 confirmed exoplanets. The dataset includes orbital parameters and properties of the planets' host stars. It is hosted on the Kaggle platform.
A historical dataset from the COMET platform, likely containing water temperature and other oceanographic measurements. The data was collected by NOAA's National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI) and covers a specific period from November 1960 to March 1961. The exact variables, geographic scope, and collection methodology require verification after download.
Antarctic biodiversity data containing a checklist of oligochaete species. The dataset was compiled by the organization SCIOPS. The number of species, temporal coverage, and update frequency are not specified.
WHO-GASP data tracks the proportion of bacterial isolates showing decreased susceptibility or resistance to extended-spectrum cephalosporins. The dataset originates from the World Health Organization's Global Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance System. Its specific temporal and geographic coverage requires verification after download.
WHO data likely tracks laboratory testing for antimicrobial resistance to a critical class of antibiotics. The dataset originates from the World Health Organization's Global Health Observatory, a primary source for international health metrics. Its specific temporal and geographic coverage requires verification after download.
Specimen records capture sea stars collected during various Argentinian expeditions over a 59-year period. The collection was managed by the Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales in Buenos Aires and contributed by Prof. Alejandro Tablado. Data capture concluded at the end of 1979.
Reduced images of gravitational lenses captured by the Hubble Space Telescope across three specific observation programs (16773, 17307, and 15867) form the core of this collection. Produced by Courtney Watson and updated through March 2026, the data includes observations using WFC3 and ACS filters alongside mock RGB composites.
Offering raw, uncorrected Raman spectral data of minipig articular cartilage across four distinct developmental stages. Created by Nathan Castro and hosted on Harvard Dataverse, the collection enables the study of biochemical changes in tissue from fetal development through maturity. The data is categorized into four specific age groups: Fetal (day 80), Neonatal, Juvenile, and Mature.
FT-IR (Fourier Transform Infrared) spectroscopy is the preferred method for creating a molecular absorption and transmission spectrum of a sample. The resulting spectrum acts as a unique molecular fingerprint, enabling the identification of unknown materials, assessment of sample quality, and determination of component amounts in mixtures. The dataset is sourced from paperswithcode, but specific details on size, origin, and update frequency are not provided.
Structural and spectroscopic characterization results for ultrathin two-dimensional metal halide perovskite sheets synthesized via a liquid surface method. It includes results from X-ray diffraction, absorption spectroscopy, Raman spectroscopy, and photoluminescence spectroscopy. The data was produced by author Li, Jiaxiong to characterize a scalable synthesis technique.
Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy (FTIR) spectra capture poly(hydroxybutyrate)-based polymer systems with 10A and 25A clay additives acting as nucleating agents. The data was recorded at ambient temperature to study changes in crystallization kinetics. The dataset is provided by the Environmental Information Data Centre.
Comprising behavioral data from a study comparing interval timing abilities in Nrxn1+/-, Nrxn1+/+, and Nrxn1ΔS5/- rescue mice using a 15-second target interval. The study involved two-month-old male mice trained to obtain sucrose rewards after a stimulus onset, with performance analyzed across individual trials. The analysis revealed earlier timing responses in Nrxn1+/- mice, suggesting a bias in long-term memory.