J/A+A/631/A147     Transient processing and analysis using AMPEL (Nordin+, 2019)
Transient processing and analysis using AMPEL:
alert management, photometry, and evaluation of light curves.
    Nordin J., Brinnel V., van Santen J., Bulla M., Feindt U., Franckowiak A.,
    Fremling C., Gal-Yam A., Giomi M., Kowalski M., Mahabal A., Miranda N.,
    Rauch L., Reusch S., Rigault M., Schulze S., Sollerman J., Stein R.,
    Yaron O., van Velzen S., Ward C.
    <Astron. Astrophys. 631, A147 (2019)>
    =2019A&A...631A.147N 2019A&A...631A.147N        (SIMBAD/NED BibCode)
ADC_Keywords: Supernovae ; Redshifts
Keywords: methods: data analysis - astronomical databases: miscellaneous -
          virtual observatory tools - supernovae: general -
          cosmology: observations
Abstract:
    Both multi-messenger astronomy and new high-throughput wide-field
    surveys require flexible tools for the selection and analysis of
    astrophysical transients.
    Here we introduce the alert management, photometry, and evaluation of
    light curves (AMPEL) system, an analysis framework designed for
    high-throughput surveys and suited for streamed data. AMPEL combines
    the functionality of an alert broker with a generic framework capable
    of hosting user-contributed code; it encourages provenance and keeps
    track of the varying information states that a transient displays. The
    latter concept includes information gathered over time and data
    policies such as access or calibration levels.
    We describe a novel ongoing real-time multi-messenger analysis using
    AMPEL to combine IceCube neutrino data with the alert streams of the
    Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF). We also reprocess the first four
    months of ZTF public alerts, and compare the yields of more than 200
    different transient selection functions to quantify efficiencies for
    selecting Type Ia supernovae that were reported to the Transient Name
    Server (TNS).
    We highlight three channels suitable for (1) the collection
    of a complete sample of extragalactic transients, (2) immediate
    follow-up of nearby transients, and (3) follow-up campaigns targeting
    young, extragalactic transients. We confirm ZTF completeness in that
    all TNS supernovae positioned on active CCD regions were detected.
    AMPEL can assist in filtering transients in real time, running alert
    reaction simulations, the reprocessing of full datasets as well as in
    the final scientific analysis of transient data. This is made possible
    by a novel way of capturing transient information through sequences of
    evolving states, and interfaces that allow new code to be natively
    applied to a full stream of alerts. This text also introduces a method
    by which users can design their own channels for inclusion in the
    AMPEL live instance that parses the ZTF stream and the real-time
    submission of high-quality extragalactic supernova candidates to the
    TNS.
Description:
    The comparison sample that is used to estimate channel efficiencies
    was constructed through retrieving all TNS SNe classified as Type Ia
    supernovae (not including peculiar subtypes) and with a detection date
    between June 5 and September 15, 2018.
File Summary:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 FileName      Lrecl  Records   Explanations
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ReadMe            80        .   This file
tablea1.dat       77      310   TNS SNe Ia June 5 to Sep 15, 2018
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Byte-by-byte Description of file: tablea1.dat
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   Bytes Format Units   Label     Explanations
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   1- 11  A11   ---     Name      IAU SN name
  12- 13  I2    h       RAh       Right ascension (J2000)
  15- 16  I2    min     RAm       Right ascension (J2000)
  18- 22  F5.2  s       RAs       Right ascension (J2000)
      24  A1    ---     DE-       Declination sign J2000)
  25- 26  I2    deg     DEd       Declination J2000)
  28- 29  I2    arcmin  DEm       Declination J2000)
  31- 35  F5.2  arcsec  DEs       Declination J2000)
  37- 41  F5.3  ---     z         ? Redshift from galaxy lines or SN features
  43- 59  A17   ---     ZTF       Position w.r.t. ZTF MSIP grid
  61- 77  A17   ---     Detect    Potentially detectably by ZTF MSIP
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Acknowledgements:
    Jakob Nordin, jnordin(at)physik.hu-berlin.de
(End)                                        Patricia Vannier [CDS]  24-Oct-2019