Siding Spring Observatory

Astronomic observatory in New South Wales, Australia

Observatory
Siding Spring Observatory is located in Australia
Siding Spring Observatory
Location of Siding Spring Observatory
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Mount Woorut
Siding Spring Mountain[1]
Mount Woorut is located in New South Wales
Mount Woorut
Mount Woorut
Location in New South Wales
Highest point
Elevation1,165 m (3,822 ft)
Parent peakMount Exmouth
Coordinates31°16′S 149°03′E / 31.267°S 149.050°E / -31.267; 149.050[1]
Geography
LocationCoonabarabran, New South Wales, Australia
Parent rangeWarrumbungles
Geology
Mountain typeVolcanic

Siding Spring Observatory near Coonabarabran, New South Wales, Australia, part of the Research School of Astronomy & Astrophysics (RSAA) at the Australian National University (ANU), incorporates the Anglo-Australian Telescope along with a collection of other telescopes owned by the Australian National University, the University of New South Wales, and other institutions. The observatory is situated 1,165 metres (3,822 ft) above sea level in the Warrumbungle National Park on Mount Woorat,[1] also known as Siding Spring Mountain. Siding Spring Observatory is owned by the Australian National University (ANU) and is part of the Mount Stromlo and Siding Spring Observatories research school.

More than A$100 million worth of research equipment is located at the observatory.[2] There are over 60 telescopes on site, though not all are operational.

History

The original Mount Stromlo Observatory was set up by the Commonwealth Government in 1924. After duty supplying optical components to the military in World War II, the emphasis on astronomical research changed in the late 1940s from solar to stellar research. Between 1953 and 1974, the 74-inch (1.9 m) reflecting telescope at Mount Stromlo was the largest optical telescope in Australia.

Already in the 1950s, the artificial lights of Canberra, ACT, had brightened the sky at Mount Stromlo to such an extent that many faint astronomical objects had been overwhelmed by light pollution. The search for a new site was initiated by Bart Bok. After a site survey was undertaken the number of possible locations was narrowed down to two – Siding Spring and Mount Bingar near Griffith, also in New South Wales.[3] Siding Spring was first suggested for astronomy by Harley Wood, the New South Wales Government Astronomer at the time. Arthur Hogg did much of the preliminary site testing.

The Siding Spring site was selected by the ANU in 1962 from many other possible locations because of the dark and cloud-free skies. By the mid-1960s the ANU had set up three telescopes, together with supporting facilities, such as sealed roads, staff accommodation, electricity and water. In 1984, the Prime Minister, Bob Hawke, opened the ANU's largest telescope, the low-cost and innovative 2.3-metre (7 ft 7 in) aperture telescope, housed in a simple, co-rotating cuboid dome.

Since the 1950s, and quite independently of developments at Siding Spring, the Australian and British governments had been negotiating about the construction of a very large telescope. When these negotiations finally came to fruition in 1969, the infrastructure of Siding Spring Observatory was already in place, and it was the obvious site at which to locate the 3.9-metre (13 ft) aperture Anglo-Australian Telescope (AAT).

During the construction of the AAT in the early 1970s, the British Science Research Council also built the UK Schmidt Telescope, 1 kilometre (0.62 mi) to the northeast of the AAT dome. The considerably wider field of view of the Schmidt optical design complements the narrower field of the AAT, in that larger areas of sky may be surveyed more quickly. Interesting objects so discovered are then studied in greater detail on the larger instrument. In 1987, the Schmidt Telescope was amalgamated with the AAT.

Siding Spring Observatory also houses many telescopes from institutions across the world including, Korea, America, the UK, Poland, Hungary, Germany and Russia. In 1990, the earth-satellite tracking facility of the Royal Greenwich Observatory was closed down after 10 years of operation.

In 2012 the first publicly accessible Internet based observatory, working in partnership with the RSAA, was commissioned by iTelescope.Net with over 25 telescopes housed in a large roll-off roof (ROR) observatory near the base of the UK Schmidt Telescope.

Las Cumbres Observatory Global Telescope Network operate a 2-metre Ritchey Chretien telescope used for research, citizen science, and education purposes by users across the globe. Also, they operate inside the clam style dome 2 x 0.40 cm telescopes, and a further 2 × 1 metre telescopes housed in individual domes outside the building. Currently there are over one thousand registered users of the Faulkes Telescopes, who vary from schools and community groups to professional astronomers. A global network of robotic optical telescopes will not only provide continuous sky coverage and the ability to treat the network as a single instrument, but also provide the resources for performing cutting-edge science in collaboration with other organisations.

ROTSE, Robotic Optical Transient Search Experiment is operated by the University of New South Wales (UNSW), the 0.45 m, 3rd-generation robotic telescope has successfully detected the transient optical emission from several GRB events. The wide field of view and the fast response permit measurements inaccessible to more conventional instruments.

HAT-South is a project to search for transiting extrasolar planets in the Southern Hemisphere. It uses a network of wide-field telescopes to monitor hundreds of thousands of bright stars, searching for the characteristic dip in light that occurs when a planet passes in front of its host star. Hat – South is made up of 3 sites in the Southern hemisphere with two "TH4" units, making that 8 x 0.2-metre telescopes each at every sites. These TH4 units consist of four 0.18 m Takahashi astrographs fitted with Apogee 4k x 4k CCDs. Each TH4 unit monitors 64 square degrees of sky at a time, so each site is capable of monitoring 128 square degrees of sky.

Automated Patrol Telescope (APT) is operated by the University of NSW (UNSW) is a wide-field CCD imaging telescope. The 0.5 m telescope has a 5-degree field of view and can be operated remotely or in a fully automatic mode. The telescope has an optical design that more resembles that of a Schmidt camera, but has a 3-element lens to achieve a wide, corrected field of view. The APT was developed by extensively modifying the optical, mechanical and electronic systems of a Baker-Nunn satellite tracking instrument. The Baker-Nunn telescope had been located at Woomera in South Australia during the 1960s, and afterward was stationed at Orroral Valley near Canberra. The camera was donated by the Smithsonian Institution to UNSW in 1982.

PROMPT (also known as Skynet) is run by the University of North Carolina. The Panchromatic Robotic Optical Monitoring and Polarimetry Telescopes is made up of 4 x 0.41 Ritchey Chretien telescopes is entirely robotic and queue based. They are able to have rapid and simultaneous multi-wavelength observations of gamma ray burst afterglows and other transient objects.

Uppsala Schmidt Telescope was built in 1957 originally located in Sweden, relocated to Mount Stromlo, then finally in 1982 making a home at Siding Spring Observatory. The telescope was used by ANU in many roles such as Near Earth Object studies (NEOs) by famous comet hunter Rob McNaught. It was also the southern hemisphere counterpart of the Catalina Sky Survey (CSS) located in Arizona, USA. The telescope is a 0.5m spherical mirror, with a 0.5m correcting plate, which allows a 6 degree field of view.

The KMT, Korean Microlensing Telescope, is a 1.6 m operated by KASI. The KMTNet aims primarily to discover extrasolar planets based on the analyses of gravitational microlensing phenomena, especially the detection of earth-mass planets in the habitable zone. The KMTNet system has a very competitive power for wide-field photometric survey sciences that study supernovae, asteroids and external galaxies, for instance. Because the observation period of the Galactic bulge focuses on the primary science on extrasolar planets, the other science programs are performed in the season when the Galactic bulge is not observable.

The Skymapper telescope, operated by the ANU, is currently mapping the entire southern sky, completing each map over a period of 3 months. The survey will record more than a billion stars and galaxies. This fully automated telescope also uses a series of filters enabling the camera to record the spectral type of stars, giving astronomers information about their age, mass and temperature. The 1.35m telescope has been used in the hunt for Planet 9 and more trans Neptunian objects, supernovae and also finding the oldest known star in the universe.

Solaris 3, operated by the Nicolaus Copernicus Astronomical Center as part of a network across the Southern hemisphere, is a single 0.5-metre telescope, using a new method referred to as eclipse timing to search for exoplanets. They have also added an astrograph to their telescope, giving it dual purpose.

Jaxa, the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, operate four 0.25-metre telescopes, searching and tracking space debris and near-Earth objects in the Southern hemisphere.

Huntsman Telephoto Array is operated by the AAO & Macquarie University to take images of faint galaxy structures using commercial lenses. Initially[when?] it will use a 0.28-metre Celestron Rowe-Ackermann Schmidt Astrograph (RASA) telescope with seven 400 mm Canon f/2.8 camera lenses.

bRing-AU, operated by a collaboration of Universities and astronomers will search for circumplanetary material, studying disks of dust in early history and the formation of icy satellites. They use 2 small modified cameras, with Kodak CCD chips.

2013 Bushfire

On 13 January 2013 the facility was threatened by a huge bushfire and firestorm. Eighteen staff were evacuated to Coonabarabran. Three buildings were destroyed: 'The Lodge' accommodation used by visiting researchers, the Director's Cottage and the Fire Station.[4][5] Bushfire prevention measures had been implemented and were credited with the protection of the telescopes.[2] Though smoke, ash and other air-borne debris entered some domes, all telescopes survived the inferno. The first telescopes back in action were those of the iTelescope Remote Observatory on 20 January.[citation needed] The Anglo-Australian Telescope resumed normal operations in mid-February 2013.[6]

Visitors

There is a visitors' gallery and exhibition area open to the public which also incorporates a café and souvenir shop. During NSW school holidays, guided tours of the site are offered. Groups of over 15 adults may apply for behind the scenes walking or bus tours.

An Open Day is held annually in October, offering talks about astronomy and tours inside many of the telescope domes which are open to the public on this one day of the year. These tours include the AAT 3.9M, UK Schmidt, iTelescope.Net, 2.3M ANU and the LCGTN 2M telescope facilities.

Telescopes

  • 3.9 m (13 ft) Anglo-Australian Telescope (AAO), operational in 1974
  • 1.24 m (4 ft 1 in) UK Schmidt Telescope (AAO)
  • 2 m (6 ft 7 in) Faulkes Telescope South (Las Cumbres Observatory)
  • 1.3 m (4 ft 3 in) SkyMapper Telescope (ANU), when launched in 2009 was the first new optical, research grade telescope in Australia since 1984.[7]
  • 2.3 m (7 ft 7 in) Advanced Technology Telescope (ANU), was built in 1984
  • Multiple – iTelescope.Net (iTelescope Network), Internet connected remote telescopes for the Public. Built 2013
  • 4 x 0.4 m (1 ft 4 in) PROMPT Telescopes (The University of North Carolina), Built 2013
  • HAT-South Telescope Network (ANU, Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian, Max Planck Institute for Astronomy) with 8 x 0.2 m telescopes
  • SOLARIS Telescope (Nicolaus Copernicus Astronomical Centre – Poland. Built 2012)
  • 0.5 m (1 ft 8 in) Uppsala Southern Schmidt Telescope (ANU – decommissioned 2013)
  • 0.5 m (1 ft 8 in) Automated Patrol Telescope (UNSW – decommissioned 2012)
  • 0.45 m (1 ft 6 in) ROTSE IIIa, Robotic Optical Transit Search Experiment (UNSW)
  • Jaxa (Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency) telescopes
  • 40 in (100 cm) Telescope (ANU), was first commissioned in 1963 currently decommissioned and moved to Milroy Observatory for use by amateurs.[8]
  • 24 in (61 cm) Telescope (ANU – decommissioned)
  • 16 in (41 cm) Telescope (ANU currently housing a 14-inch telescope for outreach programs)
  • 1.6 m (5 ft 3 in) Korea Microlensing Telescope Network (KMTNet)
  • Two 8 x 0.4 m (1 ft 4 in) Gravitational-wave Optical Transient Observer array telescopes (GOTO-S), built 2023[9][10]

Observing programs

The Anglo-Australian Near-Earth Asteroid Survey used the UK Schmidt Telescope between 1990 and 1996.[11] The same telescope was later dedicated for use by the RAVE survey of the Milky Way. The Near-Earth object search program called the Siding Spring Survey (closed 2013) used the Uppsala Southern Schmidt Telescope.[12] The 2dF Galaxy Redshift Survey, one of the largest survey of galaxies ever undertaken used the Anglo-Australian Telescope between 1995 and 2002.[13]

Discoveries

1977, the Vela Pulsar was discovered at Siding Spring. Comets discovered from the observatory include Comet 103P/Hartley, discovered in 1986 by Malcolm Hartley,[14] Comet C/2006 P1, discovered by Robert H. McNaught using the Uppsala Southern Schmidt Telescope on 8 August 2006,[15] and Comet C/2013 A1, also discovered by McNaught, which passed extremely close to Mars on 19 October 2014.[16]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c "Mount Woorut". Geographical Names Register (GNR) of NSW. Geographical Names Board of New South Wales. Retrieved 25 May 2015. Edit this at Wikidata
  2. ^ a b "Bushfire hits Australia's largest observatory". Australian Geographic. 14 January 2013. Archived from the original on 17 January 2013. Retrieved 21 January 2013.
  3. ^ Haynes, Raymond; Roslynn D. Haynes; David Malin; Richard McGee (1996). Explorers of the Southern Sky: A History of Australian Astronomy. 0521365759. p. 175. ISBN 9780521365758. Retrieved 20 January 2013.
  4. ^ Lewis, Rosie; Edwards, Harry (14 January 2013). "Siding Spring Observatory survives raging bushfire". The Australian. Retrieved 14 January 2013. key scientific facilities at Siding Spring, in northern NSW, look to have escaped major damage from the blaze
  5. ^ "Fire risk – Information for ANU staff and students". Australian National University. 15 January 2013. Retrieved 15 January 2013.
  6. ^ "Siding Spring Observatory reopens". ANU. 8 April 2013. Retrieved 22 October 2013.
  7. ^ "SkyMapper to chart southern sky". The West Australian. West Australian Newspapers. 25 May 2009. Retrieved 21 January 2013.
  8. ^ "Observations in Coonabarabran". ABC Western Plains. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 5 April 2012. Retrieved 21 January 2013.
  9. ^ "GOTO-South". Australian National University. 29 January 2024. Retrieved 14 February 2024.
  10. ^ Ulaczyk, Krzysztof (8 May 2023). "Two new arrays of telescopes installed at Siding Spring Observatory". goto-observatory.org. Retrieved 14 February 2024.
  11. ^ Dymock, Roger (2010). Asteroids and Dwarf Planets and How to Observe Them. Springer. p. 81. ISBN 978-1441964397. Retrieved 20 January 2013.
  12. ^ Safi, Michael (20 October 2014). "Earth at risk after cuts close comet-spotting program, scientists warn". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 November 2015.
  13. ^ "Galaxy Survey Reveals Missing Cosmic Link". ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily LLC. 12 January 2005. Retrieved 20 January 2013.
  14. ^ Klaus Schmidt (3 November 2010). "The Man Behind Comet Hartley 2". The International Space Fellowship. Retrieved 21 January 2013.
  15. ^ Joe Rao (12 January 2007). "The Great Comet of 2007: Watch it on the Web". Space.com. TechMediaNetwork.com. Retrieved 20 January 2013.
  16. ^ "MPEC 2013-A14 : COMET C/2013 A1 (SIDING SPRING)". IAU Minor Planet Center. 5 January 2013. (CK13A010)

External links

  • Official website
  • Anglo-Australian Observatory
  • Uppsala Southern Sky NEO Survey Telescope
  • Faulkes Telescope South
  • iTelescope.Net Observatory
  • PROMPT Telescopes
  • SkyMapper Telescope
  • ROTSE III Project
  • UNSW Automated Patrol Telescope (APT)
  • 2.3 m Advanced Technology Telescope
  • ANU 40-inch (1,000 mm) Telescope
  • Bauer, Amanda (January 2013). "Siding-Spring observatory fires". Bushfire coverage and photos. Local astronomer.
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Allyn, Barrington
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  • Podgers (890 m or 2,920 ft)
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  • Debert (840 m or 2,756 ft)
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  • Warrigal (760 m or 2,493 ft)
  • Notts (750 m or 2,461 ft)
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  • Gibson (608 m or 1,995 ft)
  • Scorpion (558 m or 1,831 ft)
  • Linda Rock (599 m or 1,965 ft)
  • Cookem (569 m or 1,867 ft)
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Illawarra
  • Bells (803 m or 2,635 ft)
  • Knights Hill (709 m or 2,326 ft)
  • Noorinan (663 m or 2,175 ft)
  • Saddleback (600 m or 1,969 ft)
  • Wanyambilli Hill (564 m or 1,850 ft)
  • Kembla (534 m or 1,752 ft)
  • Burelli (531 m or 1,742 ft)
  • Kembla West (512 m or 1,680 ft)
  • Brisbane (469 m or 1,539 ft)
  • Keira (464 m or 1,522 ft)
  • Warra (464 m or 1,522 ft)
  • Brokers Nose (440 m or 1,444 ft)
  • Nebo (252 m or 827 ft)
The Budawangs
  • Budawang (1,129 m or 3,704 ft)
  • Currockbilly (1,087 m or 3,566 ft)
  • Wog Wog (893 m or 2,930 ft)
  • Cole (876 m or 2,874 ft)
  • Sturgiss (858 m or 2,815 ft)
  • Fosters (857 m or 2,812 ft)
  • Barneys Hill (855 m or 2,805 ft)
  • The Castle (831 m or 2,726 ft)
  • Shrouded Gods (809 m or 2,654 ft)
  • Donjon (786 m or 2,579 ft)
  • Clyde (781 m or 2,562 ft)
  • Quiltys (775 m or 2,543 ft)
  • Wirritin (674 m or 2,211 ft)
  • Pigeon House / Didthul (720 m or 2,362 ft)
  • Bushwalker (640 m or 2,100 ft)
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  • Tarn
Great Dividing Range
Tweed
  • Warning (1,156 m or 3,793 ft)
  • Bar (1,130 m or 3,707 ft)
  • Glenugie (316 m or 1,037 ft)
  • Chincogan (260 m or 853 ft)
  • Gladstone
  • Goobergooberyam
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McPherson and Nightcap
  • Barney (1,359 m or 4,459 ft)
  • Burrell 933 m or 3,061 ft)
  • Neville (919 m or 3,015 ft)
  • Nardi (812 m or 2,664 ft)
  • Matheson (804 m or 2,638 ft)
  • Peates (604 m or 1,982 ft)
Mid North Coast
Nandewar
  • Kaputar (1,489 m or 4,885 ft)
  • Dowe (1,457 m or 4,780 ft)
  • Mount Coryah (1,409 m or 4,623 ft)
  • Lindesay (1,373 m or 4,505 ft)
  • Grattai (1,301 m or 4,268 ft)
  • Bushy (1,260 m or 4,134 ft)
  • Round (1,250 m or 4,101 ft)
  • Yulludunida (1,225 m or 4,019 ft)
  • Castle Top (1,120 m or 3,675 ft)
  • Gins (1,120 m or 3,675 ft)
  • Ningadhun (1,013 m or 3,323 ft)
Liverpool and Watagan
  • unnamed (1,300 m or 4,265 ft)
  • Pandoras Pass (788 m or 2,585 ft)
  • Warrawolong (641 m or 2,103 ft)
New England and Moonbi
  • Round (1,585 m or 5,200 ft)
  • Point Lookout (1,564 m or 5,131 ft)
  • Ben Lomond (1,512 m or 4,961 ft)
  • Grundy (1,463 m or 4,800 ft)
  • Barren (1,437 m or 4,715 ft)
  • Hyland (1,434 m or 4,705 ft)
  • Duval (1,393 m or 4,570 ft)
  • Black Jack (1,300 m or 4,265 ft)
  • Gulligal (1,230 m or 4,035 ft)
  • Oaky (1,070 m or 3,510 ft)
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  • Flaggy (984 m or 3,228 ft)
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Central Tablelands
  • Canobolas (1,395 m or 4,577 ft)
  • Shooters Hill (1,394 m or 4,573 ft)
  • Bindo (1,363 m or 4,472 ft)
  • Trickett (1,362 m or 4,469 ft)
  • Blaxland (901 m or 2,956 ft)
  • Hopeless (1,056 m or 3,465 ft)
The Brindabellas and Scabby
  • Bimberi (1,913 m or 6,276 ft)
  • Gingera (1,857 m or 6,093 ft)
  • Kelly (1,829 m or 6,001 ft)
  • Ginini (1,762 m or 5,781 ft)
  • Franklin (1,646 m or 5,400 ft)
  • Aggie (1,421 m or 4,662 ft)
  • Coree (1,421 m or 4,662 ft)
  • Bramina (1,392 m or 4,567 ft)
  • Bulls Head (1,375 m or 4,511 ft)
  • Black Bottle (1,356 m or 4,449 ft)
  • Lickhole (1,188 m or 3,898 ft)
  • Brindabella (972 m or 3,189 ft)
Monaro
  • Big Badja (1,363 m or 4,472 ft)
  • Brown (1,243 m or 4,078 ft)
  • Gibraltar (Bungendore) (887 m or 2,910 ft)
  • Gibraltar Hill
Snowies
Main
  • Kosciuszko (2,228 m or 7,310 ft)
  • Townsend (2,209 m or 7,247 ft)
  • unnamed peak on Etheridge Ridge (2,180 m or 7,152 ft)
  • Alice Rawson Peak (2,160 m or 7,087 ft)
  • Byatts Camp (2,159 m or 7,083 ft)
  • Carruthers (2,145 m or 7,037 ft)
  • Abbott Peak (2,145 m or 7,037 ft)
  • Mount Northcote (2,131 m or 6,991 ft)
  • Muellers Peak (2,120 m or 6,955 ft)
  • Clark (2,100 m or 6,890 ft)
  • Lee (2,100 m or 6,890 ft)
  • Gungartan (2,068 m or 6,785 ft)
  • Tate (2,068 m or 6,785 ft)
  • Jagungal (2,061 m or 6,762 ft)
  • Perisher (2,054 m or 6,739 ft)
  • Stilwell (2,040 m or 6,693 ft)
  • Watsons Crags (2,020 m or 6,627 ft)
  • Back Perisher (2,014 m or 6,608 ft)
  • Anton (2,000 m or 6,562 ft)
  • Anderson (1,997 m or 6,552 ft)
  • Blue Cow (1,994 m or 6,542 ft)
  • The Granite Peaks (1,980 m or 6,496 ft)
  • Dicky Cooper Bogong (1,980 m or 6,496 ft)
  • Gills Knobs (1,940 m or 6,365 ft)
  • Guthega Peak (1,924 m or 6,312 ft)
  • Blue Calf (1,905 m or 6,250 ft)
  • Sentinel (1,900 m or 6,234 ft)
  • Mount Piper (1,830 m or 6,004 ft)
  • Round (1,756 m or 5,761 ft)
Ramshead
  • Rams Head (2,190 m or 7,185 ft)
  • Twynam (2,178 m or 7,146 ft)
  • Rams Head North (2,177 m or 7,142 ft)
  • Little Twynam (2,120 m or 6,955 ft)
Other mountains in the GDR
  • Yengo (668 m or 2,192 ft)
Inland mountain ranges
Barrier
  • Lewis Peak (297 m or 974 ft)
Warrumbungles
  • Exmouth (1,206 m or 3,957 ft)
  • Woorut (1,165 m or 3,822 ft)
  • Needle
Other inland mountains
Island mountain ranges
Lord Howe
Mountains not within
a specific range
  • Gibraltar (863 m or 2,831 ft)
  • Gulaga (806 m or 2,644 ft)
  • Ulandra (761 m or 2,497 ft)
  • Tilga (329 m or 1,079 ft)
  • Oxley (307 m or 1,007 ft)
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International
  • ISNI
  • VIAF
National
  • Germany