C610: CATCH: Finding celestial objects with Google's Spatial Indexing Library 'S2'

Wednesday plenary 4: Contributed talk

When

4:15 to 4:30 p.m., Nov. 8, 2023

Where

Theme: Software, tools and standards for Solar System, heliophysics, and planetary research

pretalx

We present the Comet–Asteroid Telescopic Catalog Hunter (CATCH), a data archive search tool currently deployed at The NASA Planetary Data System Small Bodies Node. The Small Bodies Node is the main data archive for NASA's near-Earth objects, such as the Catalina Sky Survey data archive (Seaman et al. 2022). These are large data sets, totaling hundreds of terabytes in volume, making them difficult for most researchers to work with. To better serve the research community, we developed the CATCH tool to search these archives for potential observations of solar system small bodies. It works by identifying the intersection between a surveyed portion of the sky at a given time, and the trajectory of an object computed from its ephemerides. A core part of CATCH's architecture is the use of Google's open-source 'S2 library' to perform spatial-indexing on these data sets using a one-dimensional, space-filling Hilbert curve. Metadata for matched data products are presented to the user, and image cutouts around the ephemeris positions are presented. We believe that this tool/technique has great potential for other survey archives.

Contacts

Daniel Darg, PDS Small Bodies Node, UMD