Scientific quality of the proposal
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Research methodology : Databases and Web Interfaces
The new experimental and
theoretical data on chemical reaction rates, molecular excitation
cross sections, and molecular spectroscopy will be made available to
the whole community through databases accessible through Web
interfaces. The Cologne Database for Molecular Spectroscopy (CDMS),
which is already available on the web, contains predictions of
spectroscopic transition frequencies and intensities with their
uncertainties, concerning atoms and molecules of interest to the
astronomical community. The frequency range currently covers the
radio frequency to far-infrared regions. The BASECOL database
(Meudon, U.J.F. and Bordeaux) for collisional
ro-vibrational excitation of molecules by various colliders provides
excitation rate coefficients, full information on the chain of errors
of the data, and full bibliographical information. The consortium
will make this database available at the European level. The UMIST
database (Manchester) provides the fundamental set of reaction rate
data and related software for use in chemical kinetic modelling of
astronomical regions. The database will be extended to include
photodissociation and photoionisation cross-sections, the chemistries
of minor elements such as Mg and Li, and the synthesis of carbon
chains and rings. In addition the current web interface will be
improved to give more information on individual reactions and to
allow a facility in which users can post new data, as well as comment
on current data. The CASSIS project (Toulouse III and
Madrid) will combine suitably calibrated and corrected
molecular data from intelligent access of appropriate molecular
databases with astrophysical models in order to provide the user with
tools for the analysis of astrophysical spectra with high
spectroscopic content.