<?xml version='1.0'?><?xml-stylesheet href='/static/xsl/oai.xsl' type='text/xsl'?><ri:Resource created="2017-06-14T18:00:00Z" status="active" updated="2025-04-16T16:07:30Z" version="1.2" xmlns:g-colstat="http://dc.g-vo.org/ColStats-1" xmlns:ri="http://www.ivoa.net/xml/RegistryInterface/v1.0" xmlns:vr="http://www.ivoa.net/xml/VOResource/v1.0" xmlns:vs="http://www.ivoa.net/xml/VODataService/v1.1" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://dc.g-vo.org/ColStats-1 http://vo.ari.uni-heidelberg.de/docs/schemata/Colstats.xsd http://www.ivoa.net/xml/RegistryInterface/v1.0 http://vo.ari.uni-heidelberg.de/docs/schemata/RegistryInterface.xsd http://www.ivoa.net/xml/VOResource/v1.0 http://vo.ari.uni-heidelberg.de/docs/schemata/VOResource.xsd http://www.ivoa.net/xml/VODataService/v1.1 http://vo.ari.uni-heidelberg.de/docs/schemata/VODataService.xsd" xsi:type="vs:CatalogResource"><title>Planetary Images Database</title><shortName>bdip.observatori</shortName><identifier>ivo://padc.obspm.planeto/bdip/q/observatories</identifier><curation><publisher>Paris Astronomical Data Centre</publisher><creator><name>Pierre Drossart</name></creator><date role="Updated">2025-04-16T16:01:18Z</date><contact><name>Florence Henry</name><address>Observatoire de Paris PADC, 5 place Jules Jansen, 92195 Meudon, France</address><email>vo.paris@obspm.fr</email></contact></curation><content><subject>planetary-science</subject><subject>planetary-atmospheres</subject><subject>jupiter</subject><subject>saturn</subject><subject>mars</subject><subject>venus</subject><subject>mercury-planet</subject><description>Observatory names</description><referenceURL>http://voparis-tap-planeto.obspm.fr/tableinfo/bdip.observatories</referenceURL><contentLevel>General</contentLevel><contentLevel>University</contentLevel><contentLevel>Research</contentLevel><contentLevel>Amateur</contentLevel><relationship><relationshipType>IsServedBy</relationshipType><relatedResource ivo-id="ivo://padc.obspm.planeto/tap">PADC TAP Server on voparis-tap-planeto.obspm.fr TAP service</relatedResource></relationship></content><capability standardID="ivo://ivoa.net/std/TAP#aux"><interface role="std" version="1.1" xsi:type="vs:ParamHTTP"><accessURL use="full">http://voparis-tap-planeto.obspm.fr/tap</accessURL></interface></capability><tableset><schema><name>bdip</name><title>Planetary Images Database</title><description>
One Century of Planetary Images
-------------------------------

The database of planetary images (BDIP) comes from the digitization of photographs 
collected and preserved by the Center for Photographic Documentation of the planets 
held by the IAU at the Meudon Observatory in 1961 under the the curation of J.H. Focas 
(IAUC, 12th General Assembly, Report 1964). A similar center was established at the 
Lowell Observatory in Arizona, under the responsibility of W.A. Baum. The photographs 
were duplicated between the two centers.

Approximately 8400 photographs of Mars, Venus, Mercury, Jupiter and Saturn, acquired 
between 1890 and 1977, are kept at LESIA. They remain available for research on 
justified request. The digitization of these planetary photographs was performed by 
scanning between 1998 and 2000 by the staff of the Documentation Center (R. Boyer, 
E. Neyvoz et al), in the framework of a project proposed to the Scientific Council 
of the Paris Observatory by P. Drossart. Care was taken to preserve the best possible 
definition and photometric linearity of photographs during the scanning procedure. 
Storage was done using different image formats (JPEG, GIF and TIFF ie, lossy, lossless 
and uncompressed). Improved techniques for mass storage and network distribution today 
allow us to provide access to the highest definition images, thereby facilitating 
research on the evolution of planets, at asecular time scale.

Scientific interest
-------------------

The scientific interest of the photographic database mainly concerns planetary 
atmospheric evolution of Mars, Jupiter, Saturn and Venus. The evolution of the Martian 
storms, or the polar caps on Mars, the survey of storms observed on Saturn, or features 
like the Great Red Spot of Jupiter or oval white spots are among the subjects which 
triggered on photographs. Such studies can be refined today thanks to digital pictures 
(Sanchez-Lavega and Battaner, A and A Suppl. Ser., 64, 287, 1986). Some images of 
Mercury are also available.</description><table><name>bdip.observatories</name><description>Observatory names</description><column><name>obs_code</name><description>BDIP Observatory Code</description><ucd>meta.id</ucd><dataType arraysize="*" xsi:type="vs:VOTableType">char</dataType><flag>indexed</flag><flag>primary</flag></column><column><name>obs_name</name><description>Observatory Name</description><ucd>meta.id</ucd><dataType arraysize="*" xsi:type="vs:VOTableType">char</dataType><flag>nullable</flag></column><column><name>web_url</name><description>Observatory Reference URL</description><ucd>meta.ref.url</ucd><dataType arraysize="*" xsi:type="vs:VOTableType">char</dataType><flag>nullable</flag></column><column><name>iau_obs_code</name><description>IAU Observatory Code</description><ucd>meta.id</ucd><dataType arraysize="*" xsi:type="vs:VOTableType">char</dataType><flag>nullable</flag></column></table></schema></tableset></ri:Resource>