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Telescope observations, star catalogs, exoplanet surveys, galaxy morphology, gravitational waves, spectroscopy
2,948 datasets
BARREL 2M X-ray Spectrometer (SSPC) Level 2 data provides 256-channel, 32-second resolution spectra of Bremsstrahlung X-rays from precipitating electrons. The dataset was produced by NASA's BARREL mission, which launched over 50 stratospheric balloons from Antarctica and Sweden between 2013 and 2016. It was designed to study electron losses from Earth's Radiation Belts in coordination with the Van Allen Probes mission.
48 channels of medium time resolution, 4 s, Bremsstrahlung X-ray spectra detected with a NaI Scintillator, covering an energy range from 0 MeV to 4 MeV. The BARREL Mission was a NASA Living with a Star Mission of Opportunity, launching over 50 stratospheric balloons from Antarctica and Sweden between 2013 and 2016. It provided measurements to study electron losses from Earth's Radiation Belts and augmented the Van Allen Probes mission.
Antarctic and Arctic stratospheric balloon campaigns collected this data. It contains six channels of fast time resolution (50 ms) Bremsstrahlung X-ray spectra, covering an energy range from 0 MeV to 1.5 MeV. The BARREL mission, a NASA Living with a Star Mission of Opportunity, gathered these measurements from over 50 balloon launches between 2013 and 2016.
48 channels of medium time resolution, 4 s, Bremsstrahlung X-ray spectra detected with a NaI Scintillator, covering an energy range from 0 MeV to 4 MeV. The BARREL Mission was a NASA Living with a Star Mission of Opportunity, designed to study electron losses from Earth's Radiation Belts and augment the Van Allen Probes mission. Over 50 stratospheric balloons were launched across four campaigns from Antarctica (2013, 2014) and Sweden (2015, 2016).
BARREL was a NASA balloon mission designed to study electron losses from Earth's Radiation Belts. Over 50 stratospheric balloons were launched from Antarctica and Sweden between 2013 and 2016, carrying X-ray spectrometers. The dataset provides six channels of fast time resolution (50 ms) Bremsstrahlung X-ray spectra from 0 MeV to 1.5 MeV.
Antarctic and Arctic stratospheric balloon campaigns collected 256-channel X-ray spectra from 2013 to 2016. The BARREL mission, a NASA Living with a Star project, measured bremsstrahlung X-rays from precipitating relativistic electrons to study losses from Earth's Radiation Belts. Over 50 stratospheric balloons were launched from bases in Antarctica and Sweden.
BARREL was a NASA Living with a Star mission that launched over 50 stratospheric balloons to study electron precipitation from Earth's radiation belts. Its X-ray spectrometer collected 48-channel, 4-second resolution bremsstrahlung spectra in the 0-4 MeV energy range during campaigns from 2013 to 2016. Data was collected from launch sites in Antarctica and Sweden to coordinate with the Van Allen Probes mission.
Six channels of fast time resolution, 50 ms, Bremsstrahlung X-ray spectra detected with a NaI Scintillator. The BARREL Mission was a multiple-balloon investigation designed to study electron losses from Earth's Radiation Belts, launched from Antarctica and Sweden between 2013 and 2016. Over 50 stratospheric balloons were launched, providing measurements to augment the Van Allen Probes mission.
BARREL MSPC provides 48-channel, 4-second resolution Bremsstrahlung X-ray spectra from balloon-borne instruments. The dataset was collected by NASA's BARREL mission during four campaigns from 2013 to 2016, launched from Antarctica and Sweden. It measures X-rays produced by precipitating relativistic electrons from Earth's radiation belts.
BARREL 2W X-ray Spectrometer (SSPC) Bremsstrahlung X-ray Spectrum Slow Time Resolution, Level 2, 32 s Data provides 256-channel X-ray spectra from balloon-borne instruments. The BARREL mission, a NASA Living with a Star Mission of Opportunity, launched over 50 stratospheric balloons from Antarctica and Sweden between 2013 and 2016 to study electron precipitation from Earth's radiation belts. Data collection coordinated with the Van Allen Probes mission and other ground and space-based instruments.
Six channels of fast time resolution (50 ms) Bremsstrahlung X-ray spectra detected with a NaI scintillator, covering an energy range from 0 MeV to 1.5 MeV. The data was collected by the NASA BARREL mission, a multiple-balloon investigation designed to study electron losses from Earth's Radiation Belts, launched from Antarctica (2013-2014) and Sweden (2015-2016). Over 50 stratospheric balloons were launched across four campaigns, providing measurements to augment the Van Allen Probes mission.
Six channels of fast time resolution, 50 ms, Bremsstrahlung X-ray spectra detected with a NaI Scintillator, covering an energy range from 0 MeV to 1.5 MeV. The BARREL Mission was a NASA Living with a Star Mission of Opportunity, launching over 50 stratospheric balloons from Antarctica and Sweden between 2013 and 2016 to study electron losses from Earth's Radiation Belts.
Antarctic and Arctic stratospheric balloon campaigns collected fast time-resolution X-ray spectra to study electron precipitation from Earth's radiation belts. The BARREL mission, a NASA Living with a Star Mission of Opportunity, launched over 50 balloons from Halley Bay, SANAE IV, and Kiruna between 2013 and 2016. Data from six spectrometer channels (FSPC1a-FSPC4) cover an energy range from 0 MeV to 1.5 MeV.
48 channels of medium time resolution, 4 s, Bremsstrahlung X-ray spectra detected with a NaI Scintillator, covering an energy range from 0 MeV to 4 MeV. The BARREL Mission was a NASA Living with a Star Mission of Opportunity, launching over 50 stratospheric balloons from Antarctica and Sweden between 2013 and 2016 to study electron losses from Earth's Radiation Belts. The data was collected to augment the Van Allen Probes mission and characterize the spatial scale of precipitation at relativistic energies.
The BARREL mission conducted balloon campaigns from 2013 to 2016, launching over 50 payloads from Antarctica and Sweden. The dataset provides 48-channel, 4-second medium time resolution Bremsstrahlung X-ray spectra detected by NaI scintillators, covering an energy range from 0 MeV to 4 MeV. It was collected by NASA to study electron precipitation from Earth's radiation belts, augmenting the Van Allen Probes mission.
The BARREL mission collected data from balloon campaigns conducted in 2013, 2014, 2015, and 2016. It provides 256-channel slow time resolution (32 s) Bremsstrahlung X-ray spectra from NaI scintillators, covering an energy range from 0 MeV to 10 MeV. The data was collected by NASA to study electron precipitation from Earth's radiation belts.
Antarctic and Arctic stratospheric balloon campaigns collected 256-channel X-ray spectra to study electron precipitation from Earth's radiation belts. The BARREL mission, a NASA Living with a Star project, launched over 50 balloons from Halley Bay, SANAE IV, and Kiruna between 2013 and 2016. Data provides 32-second slow time resolution measurements of bremsstrahlung X-rays from 0 MeV to 10 MeV.
BARREL SSPC Level 2 data provides 256 channels of slow time resolution (32 s) Bremsstrahlung X-ray spectra from the BARREL mission. The mission, a NASA Living with a Star Mission of Opportunity, launched over 50 stratospheric balloons from Antarctica and Sweden between 2013 and 2016 to study electron precipitation from Earth's Radiation Belts. The data was collected by X-ray spectrometers on balloons at altitudes near 30 km.
48 channels of medium time resolution, 4 s, Bremsstrahlung X-ray spectra detected with a NaI Scintillator, covering an energy range from 0 MeV to 4 MeV. The BARREL Mission was a NASA Living with a Star project, launching over 50 stratospheric balloons from Antarctica and Sweden between 2013 and 2016 to study electron precipitation from Earth's Radiation Belts. The data was collected in coordination with the Van Allen Probes mission and other ground and space-based instruments.
Six channels of fast time resolution (50 ms) Bremsstrahlung X-ray spectra detected by NaI scintillators on stratospheric balloons. The BARREL mission launched over 50 balloons from Antarctic and Arctic sites between 2013 and 2016 to study electron precipitation from Earth's radiation belts. Data was collected by NASA's BARREL mission to augment the Van Allen Probes.