Daina Bouquin
a metadata toolkit for small satellites
Mechanisms for modeling relationships between the information gathered from contextual sources.
Humphrey, S.D. Multiple Exposures of the Moon: Nine Exposures, daguerreotype, 1849.
Earliest image of the moon.
Was the only image of the moon.
Was a technological innovation that started a scientific revolution.
Now it's art.
Galileo's notes.
Was chicken scratch.
Now the birth of observational astronomy and the origin of scientific method.
Galilei, G. (1610). Osservazioni e calcoli relativi ai Pianeti Medicei.
Meaning is collective agreement about a specific thing at a specific time.
Meaning needs to be
machine actionable
Human-readable metadata is limited
Meaning needs to be
machine actionable
Human-readable metadata is limited
Incomplete example, but you get the idea
MetaSat has three primary components:
MetaSat Vocabulary
MetaSat Example Files (JSON-LD)
MetaSat Crosswalks
Example implementations of the MetaSat vocabulary.
Our examples are written in JSON-LD
JSON-LD is a highly flexible form of RDF that is built to be easily human-writable and machine-actionable.
The examples files combine our vocabulary with structure, and give recommendations for how the concepts relate to each other.
Example of a few subsystems from the PICARD mission
A crosswalk is a table of equivalencies for converting metadata from one vocabulary into another.
Our crosswalks, in combination with our decision to develop JSON-LD examples, will allow MetaSat users to combine different vocabularies into a single document, or convert documents into other RDF syntaxes without losing any information.
This example also incorporates concepts from schema.org
Libre Space Foundation— dedicated to supporting open source space technologies; creators of SatNOGS
SatNOGS was first to implement MetaSat on their APIs
PMPedia— collaboratively developed by the University of Colorado Boulder Laboratory for Atmospheric Space Physics (LASP) and The Aerospace Corporation.
SSRI Knowledge Base— collaboratively developed by Sedaro Technologies and NASA’s Small Spacecraft Systems Virtual Institute with participation from civil, DoD, and commercial space systems providers.
The CEOS Database— funded by ESA to provide information on satellites based on an annual survey of all 34 CEOS member agencies.
We have created some tools, but it is not yet clear
how to best support their use as the mission progresses
It is no one's job to:
It is also not clear what should be recorded, when, or how.
Determine information needed to adequately describe open SmallSat missions; document the required information.
What is the prevailing normative interpretation of “open science” in this context? (e.g., What hardware metadata must be available? How should it be made available? Which physical and digital artifacts should be archived?)
What major policies influence open science practices in this context? (e.g., open software policies; UN Convention on Registration of Objects Launched into Outer Space)
Define what tools are needed to adequately support information maintenance throughout the SmallSat mission; define relevant non-technical needs.
Context is too easily lost, and lessons learned are too valuable to ignore problems with sharing information.
Our goal is to pilot new approaches to
supporting your research.