The INAF radio data archive: from data publication to interoperability of time-domain data
, Posters

The Italian National Institute for Astrophysics (INAF) manages three single dish radio telescopes (Medicina, Noto and Sardinia Radio Telescope, SRT). The three dishes are also part of the European VLBI Network and the International VLBI Service for Geodesy & Astrometry. Also, SRT is involved in international collaborations dedicated to pulsar observation, namely the European Pulsar Timing Array and the Large European Array for Pulsars project.
The increasing importance of Science Archives and archive mining in defining the ultimate productivity of an observing facility motivated the Italian Centre for Astronomical Archives (IA2) service to develop and maintain the INAF radio data archive. Such a geographically-distributed archival facility flexibly handles different data models and formats, also supporting data discovery/access through Virtual Observatory (VO). In this contribution I will give an overview of the archival system, focusing on dealing with the increasing data rates/volumes produced by time-domain observations with state-of-the-art digital backends. I will address issues posed by the standardisation of time-domain-related data formats under the perspective of metadata completeness, necessary for archival publication. Also, I will present the INAF effort in modeling such data to enable their discoverability through VO tools and services.
Besides publishing radio data from the Italian radio telescopes, IA2 is also committed to provide access to data from international facilities and projects (such as ALMA data from ESO CalMS and Additional Representative Images for Legacy, ARI-L). I will finally mention the IA2 roadmap towards a modern Science Gateway, allowing users to produce advanced data products starting from telescope raw observations.

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I am a radioastronomer and data steward, currently working at INAF - Istituto di Radioastronomia (IRA) in Bologna (Italy), member of the Italian Centre for Astronomical Archives (IA2), the IVOA Radio Interest Group and the Italian Square Kilometre Array Regional Centre (ITA-SRC).

I work for development and maintenance of the Italian radio telescopes data archive, and in promoting Open Science practices, e.g. by supporting IVOA initiatives and developments of data centres for future facilities, like the Square Kilometre Array (SKA).
I am also active in the fields of radio polarimetry/magnetism (mainly in Active Galactive Nuclei) and cosmology with radio telescopes.

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