Output Table Description |
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Object Classes 00-29 00 Sun 10 WC 20 B0-B2 V-IV 01 Earth 11 WN 21 B3-B5 V-IV 02 Moon 12 Main Sequence O 22 B6-B9.5 V-IV 03 Planet 13 Supergiant O 23 B0-B2 III-I 04 Planetary satellite 14 Oe 24 B3-B5 III-I 05 Minor planet 15 Of 25 B6-B9.5 III-I 06 Comet 16 SD O 26 Be 07 Interplanetary medium 17 WD O 27 Bp 08 Giant red spot 18 28 sd B 09 19 Other UV-strong sources 29 WDB Object Classes 30-59 30 A0-A3 V-IV 40 F0-F2 50 R, N or S Types 31 A4-A9 V-IV 41 F3-F9 51 Long Period Variable Stars 32 A0-A3 III-I 42 Fp 52 Irregular Variables 33 A4-A9 III-I 43 Late-Type Degenerate Stars 53 Regular Variables 34 Ae 44 G IV-V 54 Dwarf Novae 35 Am 45 G III-I 55 Classical Novae 36 Ap 46 K V-IV 56 Supernovae 37 WDA 47 K III-I 57 Symbiotic Stars 38 Horizontal Branch Stars 48 M V-IV 58 T Tauri 39 Composite Spectral Type 49 M III-I 59 X-ray Object Classes 60-89 60 Shell Star 70 Planetary Nebula+Central Star 80 Spiral Galaxy 61 ETA Carinae 71 Planetary Nebula-Central Star 81 Elliptical Galaxy 62 Pulsar 72 H II Region 82 Irregular Galaxy 63 Nova-like 73 Reflection Nebula 83 Globular Cluster 64 Other Stellar Objects 74 Dark Cloud (absorption spectrum) 84 Seyfert Galaxy 65 Misidentified Targets 75 Supernova Remnant 85 Quasar 66 Interacting Binaries 76 Ring Nebula (shock ionised) 86 Radio Galaxy 67 77 87 BL Lacertae Object 68 78 88 Emission Line Galaxy (non-Seyfert) 69 Herbig-Haro Objects 79 89 Object Classes 90-99 90 Intergalactic Medium 94 97 91 95 98 Wavelength Calibration Lamp 92,93 96 99 NULLS and Flat Fields
The meaning of the code for background, implemented on 1 Sep. 1979, is:
Code Description 0 not applicable 1 no spectrum visible 2 very faint spectrum: max DN < 20 above background 3 underexposed spectrum: max DN < 100 above background 4 weak spectrum: 100 < max DN < 150 above background 5 good: no saturation but max DN over 150 above background 6 a bit strong: a few pixels saturated 7 saturated for less than half the spectrum 8 mostly saturated but some parts usable 9 completely saturated
Note: Goddard images used the letter X to refer to saturation.
Code Description 0 DN < 20 1 21 < DN < 30 2 31 < DN < 40 3 41 < DN < 50 4 51 < DN < 60 5 61 < DN < 70 6 71 < DN < 80 7 81 < DN < 90 8 91 < DN < 100 9 DN > 101 X saturated
Code Description T Track lost during exposure U UVC voltage other than -5kV R Remnant of previous spectrum visible Z Contamination by solar spectrum or extended source A Abnormal read B Bad scan in the LWP camera N Non-standard image acquisition S Serendipity exposure P Partial read H History playback C Data corrupted (DMU anomaly) W LWR heater warm-up 8 Cross-correlation < 80% M Missing temperature O Offset from centre or nucleus