22 research outputs found
The first world atlas of the artificial night sky brightness
We present the first World Atlas of the zenith artificial night sky
brightness at sea level. Based on radiance calibrated high resolution DMSP
satellite data and on accurate modelling of light propagation in the
atmosphere, it provides a nearly global picture of how mankind is proceeding to
envelope itself in a luminous fog. Comparing the Atlas with the U.S. Department
of Energy (DOE) population density database we determined the fraction of
population who are living under a sky of given brightness. About two thirds of
the World population and 99% of the population in US (excluding Alaska and
Hawaii) and EU live in areas where the night sky is above the threshold set for
polluted status. Assuming average eye functionality, about one fifth of the
World population, more than two thirds of the US population and more than one
half of the EU population have already lost naked eye visibility of the Milky
Way. Finally, about one tenth of the World population, more than 40% of the US
population and one sixth of the EU population no longer view the heavens with
the eye adapted to night vision because the sky brightness.Comment: 24 pages, 11 size-reduced PostScript figures, 3 statistical tables,
accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical
Society, high-resolution original maps will be available soon from
http://www.lightpollution.it/dmsp/ as zipped TIFF file
The QUEST RR Lyrae Survey: Confirmation of the Clump at 50 kpc and Other Over-Densities in the Outer Halo
We have measured the periods and light curves of 148 RR Lyrae variables from
V=13.5 to 19.7 from the first 100 sq. degrees of the QUEST RR Lyrae survey.
Approximately 55% of these stars belong to the clump of stars detected earlier
by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. According to our measurements, this feature
has ~10 times the background density of halo stars, spans at least 37.5 deg by
3.5 deg in right ascension and declination (>=30 by >=3 kpc), lies ~50 kpc from
the Sun, and has a depth along the line of sight of ~5 kpc (1 sigma). These
properties are consistent with the recent models that suggest it is a tidal
stream from the Sgr dSph galaxy. The mean period of the type ab variables, 0.58
d, is also consistent. In addition, we have found two smaller over-densities in
the halo, one of which may be related to the globular cluster Pal 5.Comment: 12 pages (including 4 figures). Accepted for publication in the ApJ
Letter
Discovery of the Optical Transient of the Gamma Ray Burst 990308
The optical transient of the faint Gamma Ray Burst 990308 was detected by the
QUEST camera on the Venezuelan 1-m Schmidt telescope starting 3.28 hours after
the burst. Our photometry gives , , , and for times ranging from 3.28 to 3.47
hours after the burst. The colors correspond to a spectral slope of close to
. Within the standard synchrotron fireball model,
this requires that the external medium be less dense than , the
electrons contain of the shock energy, and the magnetic field energy
must be less than 24% of the energy in the electrons for normal interstellar or
circumstellar densities. We also report upper limits of at 132 s
(with LOTIS), from 132-1029s (with LOTIS), at 28.2 min
(with Super-LOTIS), and a 8.5 GHz flux of at 110 days (with the
Very Large Array). WIYN 3.5-m and Keck 10-m telescopes reveal this location to
be empty of any host galaxy to and . The lack of a host
galaxy likely implies that it is either substantially subluminous or more
distant than a red shift of .Comment: ApJ Lett submitted, 5 pages, 2 figures, no space for 12 coauthor
A Large Area CCD Camera for the Schmidt Telescope at the Venezuelan National Astronomical Observatory
We have designed, constructed and put into operation a large area CCD camera
that covers a large fraction of the image plane of the 1 meter Schmidt
telescope at Llano del Hato in Venezuela. The camera consists of 16 CCD devices
arranged in a 4 x 4 mosaic covering 2.3 degrees x 3.5 degrees of sky. The CCDs
are 2048 x 2048 LORAL devices with 15 micron pixels. The camera is optimized
for drift scan photometry and objective prism spectroscopy. The design
considerations, construction features and performance parameters are described
in the following article.Comment: 34 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication in PAS
Extinction with 2MASS: star counts and reddening toward the North America and the Pelican Nebulae
We propose a general method for mapping the extinction in dense molecular
clouds using 2MASS near-infrared data. The technique is based on the
simultaneous utilization of star counts and colors. These two techniques
provide independent estimations of the extinction and each method reacts
differently to foreground star contamination and to star clustering. We take
advantage of both methods to build a large scale extinction map (2.5 x 2.5
degrees) of the North America-Pelican nebulae complex. With Ks star counts and
H-Ks color analysis the visual extinction is mapped up to 35 mag. Regions with
visual extinction greater than 20 mag account for less than 3% of the total
mass of the cloud. Color is generally a better estimator for the extinction
than star counts. Nine star clusters are identified in the area, seven of which
were previously unknown.Comment: 33 pages, 14 figures, accepted in A
The quest RR lyrae survey. I. The first catalog
With the 1 m Schmidt telescope of the Llano del Hato Observatory and the QUEST CCD camera, 380 deg 2 of the sky have been surveyed for RR Lyrae variables in a band 2.°3 wide in declination (centered at δ = -1°) and covering right ascensions from 4. h1 to 6. h1 and from 8. h0 to 17. h0. The bright limit (due to CCD saturation) and the faint limit are V∼13.5 and ∼19.7, respectively, which correspond to ∼4 and ∼60 kpc from the Sun. We present a catalog of the positions, amplitudes, mean magnitudes, periods, and light curves of the 498 RR Lyrae variables that have been identified in this region of the sky. The majority of these stars (86%) are new discoveries. The completeness of the survey has been estimated from simulations that model the periods and light curves of real RR Lyrae variables and take into account the pattern of epochs of observation. While the completeness of the survey varies with apparent magnitude and with position, almost everywhere in the surveyed region it is quite high (\u3e80%) for the type ab RR Lyrae variables and between 30% and 90% for the low-amplitude type c variables
Discovery of the bright trans-Neptunian object 2000 EB173
We describe the discovery circumstances and photometric properties of 2000 EB173, now one of the brightest trans-Neptunian objects (TNOs) with opposition magnitude mR = 18.9 and also one of the largest Plutinos, found with the drift-scanning camera of the Quasar Equatorial Survey Team, attached to the 1 m Schmidt telescope of the National Observatory of Venezuela. We measure B-V = 0.99 ± 0.14 and V-R = 0.57 ± 0.05, a red color observed for many fainter TNOs. At our magnitude limit mK = 20.1 ± 0.20, our single detection reveals a sky density of 0.015+0.034-0.012 TNOs per square degree (the error bars are 68% confidence limits), consistent with fainter surveys showing a cumulative number proportional to 100.5mR. Assuming an inclination distribution of TNOs with FWHM exceeding 30°, it is likely that 100 to several hundred objects brighter than mR = 20.1 remain to be discovered