Lecoeur-Taibi Isabelle - Gaia
Gaia contributors
Gaia was proposed in 1993 and since then, many people have been involved in the Gaia mission, whether at ESA, at industry side or at one of the institutes involved in the Gaia data processing. The Gaia Data Processing and Analysis Consortium (DPAC) is a collaboration which consists of around 450 scientists and engineers.
The list of Gaia contributors presented here should not be considered a complete representation of the entire consortium and should not be considered as a list of currenly active people on the Gaia mission. A more complete list of Gaia contributors that were involved in the creation of the Gaia catalogues can be obtained from the author lists of the Gaia Collaboration overview papers (for Gaia Data Release 1 see here, for Gaia Data Release 2 see here, for Gaia Early Data Release 3 see here, for the full Gaia Data Release 3 see here, for Gaia Focused Product Release see here). A history of contributions to the Gaia mission can be found from the acknowledgements given with each data release.
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Isabelle Lecoeur-Taibi INTEGRAL Science Data Center (ISDC) |
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Isabelle Lecoeur-Taibi graduated as a Computer Science engineer in France. After 17 years in scientific software development in various fields at the French Atomic Commission (CEA), she has been working as project controller at the INTEGRAL Science Data Center(ISDC - isdc.unige.ch), attached to the Geneva Observatory, since 2001. In the INTEGRAL mission (launched in October 2002), she has been in charge of planning and is responsible for the data analysis software releases including software integration, testing, documentation production and software distribution to the scientific community. In Gaia, Isabelle has been a member of CU7 (Variability Processing) (see the web page) since mid-2006 and will mostly focus on Quality Assurance and Configuration Management within CU7 and the Data Processing Center (DPC) located at the ISDC. CU7 is in charge of characterizing photometric and spectral variability and will contribute to the variable objects classification. [Published: 20/10/2006] |
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