189 research outputs found
NYU-VAGC: a galaxy catalog based on new public surveys
Here we present the New York University Value-Added Galaxy Catalog
(NYU-VAGC), a catalog of local galaxies (mostly below a redshift of about 0.3)
based on a set of publicly-released surveys (including the 2dFGRS, 2MASS, PSCz,
FIRST, and RC3) matched to the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Data Release 2.
Excluding areas masked by bright stars, the photometric sample covers 3514
square degrees and the spectroscopic sample covers 2627 square degrees (with
about 85% completeness). Earlier, proprietary versions of this catalog have
formed the basis of many SDSS investigations of the power spectrum, correlation
function, and luminosity function of galaxies. We calculate and compile derived
quantities (for example, K-corrections and structural parameters for galaxies).
The SDSS catalog presented here is photometrically recalibrated, reducing
systematic calibration errors across the sky from about 2% to about 1%. We
include an explicit description of the geometry of the catalog, including all
imaging and targeting information as a function of sky position. Finally, we
have performed eyeball quality checks on a large number of objects in the
catalog in order to flag deblending and other errors. This catalog is
complementary to the SDSS Archive Servers, in that NYU-VAGC's calibration,
geometrical description, and conveniently small size are specifically designed
for studying galaxy properties and large-scale structure statistics using the
SDSS spectroscopic catalog.Comment: accepted by AJ; full resolution version available at
http://sdss.physics.nyu.edu/vagc/va_paper.ps; data files available at
http://sdss.physics.nyu.edu/vagc
The u'g'r'i'z' Standard Star Network
We present the 158 standard stars that define the u'g'r'i'z' photometric
system. These stars form the basis for the photometric calibration of the Sloan
Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). The defining instrument system and filters, the
observing process, the reduction techniques, and the software used to create
the stellar network are all described. We briefly discuss the history of the
star selection process, the derivation of a set of transformation equations for
the UBVRcIc system, and plans for future work.Comment: References to URLs in paper have been updated to reflect moved
website. Accepted by AJ. 50 pages, including 20 pages of text, 9 tables, and
15 figures. Plain ASCII text versions of Tables 8 and 9 can be found at
http://home.fnal.gov/~dtucker/ugriz/index.html (new URL
Consensus in Guidelines for Evaluation of DSD by the Texas Children's Hospital Multidisciplinary Gender Medicine Team
The Gender Medicine Team (GMT), comprised of members with expertise in endocrinology, ethics, genetics, gynecology, pediatric surgery, psychology, and urology, at Texas Children's Hospital and Baylor College of Medicine formed a task force to formulate a consensus statement on practice guidelines for managing disorders of sexual differentiation (DSD) and for making sex assignments. The GMT task force reviewed published evidence and incorporated findings from clinical experience. Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) was used to assess the quality of evidence presented in the literature for establishing evidence-based guidelines. The task force presents a consensus statement regarding specific diagnostic and therapeutic issues in the management of individuals who present with DSD. The consensus statement includes recommendations for (1) laboratory workup, (2) acute management, (3) sex assignment in an ethical framework that includes education and involvement of the parents, and (4) surgical management
The Clustering of Luminous Red Galaxies in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Imaging Data
We present the 3D real space clustering power spectrum of a sample of
\~600,000 luminous red galaxies (LRGs) measured by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
(SDSS), using photometric redshifts. This sample of galaxies ranges from
redshift z=0.2 to 0.6 over 3,528 deg^2 of the sky, probing a volume of 1.5
(Gpc/h)^3, making it the largest volume ever used for galaxy clustering
measurements. We measure the angular clustering power spectrum in eight
redshift slices and combine these into a high precision 3D real space power
spectrum from k=0.005 (h/Mpc) to k=1 (h/Mpc). We detect power on gigaparsec
scales, beyond the turnover in the matter power spectrum, on scales
significantly larger than those accessible to current spectroscopic redshift
surveys. We also find evidence for baryonic oscillations, both in the power
spectrum, as well as in fits to the baryon density, at a 2.5 sigma confidence
level. The statistical power of these data to constrain cosmology is ~1.7 times
better than previous clustering analyses. Varying the matter density and baryon
fraction, we find \Omega_M = 0.30 \pm 0.03, and \Omega_b/\Omega_M = 0.18 \pm
0.04, The detection of baryonic oscillations also allows us to measure the
comoving distance to z=0.5; we find a best fit distance of 1.73 \pm 0.12 Gpc,
corresponding to a 6.5% error on the distance. These results demonstrate the
ability to make precise clustering measurements with photometric surveys
(abridged).Comment: 23 pages, 27 figures, submitted to MNRA
High-Redshift Quasars Found in Sloan Digital Sky Survey Commissioning Data II: The Spring Equatorial Stripe
This is the second paper in a series aimed at finding high-redshift quasars
from five-color (u'g'r'i'z') imaging data taken along the Celestial Equator by
the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) during its commissioning phase. In this
paper, we present 22 high-redshift quasars (z>3.6) discovered from ~250 deg^2
of data in the spring Equatorial Stripe, plus photometry for two previously
known high-redshift quasars in the same region of sky. Our success rate of
identifying high-redshift quasars is 68%. Five of the newly discovered quasars
have redshifts higher than 4.6 (z=4.62, 4.69, 4.70, 4.92 and 5.03). All the
quasars have i* < 20.2 with absolute magnitude -28.8 < M_B < -26.1 (h=0.5,
q_0=0.5). Several of the quasars show unusual emission and absorption features
in their spectra, including an object at z=4.62 without detectable emission
lines, and a Broad Absorption Line (BAL) quasar at z=4.92.Comment: 28 pages, AJ in press (Jan 2000), final version with minor changes;
high resolution finding charts available at
http://www.astro.princeton.edu/~fan/paper/qso2.htm
SDSSJ103913.70+533029.7: A Super Star Cluster in the Outskirts of a Galaxy Merger
We describe the serendipitous discovery in the spectroscopic data of the
Sloan Digital Sky Survey of a star-like object, SDSSJ103913.70+533029.7, at a
heliocentric radial velocity of +1012 km/s. Its proximity in position and
velocity to the spiral galaxy NGC 3310 suggests an association with the galaxy.
At this distance, SDSSJ103913.70+533029.7 has the luminosity of a super star
cluster and a projected distance of 17 kpc from NGC 3310. Its spectroscopic and
photometric properties imply a mass of > 10^6 solar masses and an age close to
that of the tidal shells seen around NGC 3310, suggesting that it formed in the
event which formed the shells.Comment: Accepted by AJ: 4 figures (1 color
KL Estimation of the Power Spectrum Parameters from the Angular Distribution of Galaxies in Early SDSS Data
We present measurements of parameters of the 3-dimensional power spectrum of
galaxy clustering from 222 square degrees of early imaging data in the Sloan
Digital Sky Survey. The projected galaxy distribution on the sky is expanded
over a set of Karhunen-Loeve eigenfunctions, which optimize the signal-to-noise
ratio in our analysis. A maximum likelihood analysis is used to estimate
parameters that set the shape and amplitude of the 3-dimensional power
spectrum. Our best estimates are Gamma=0.188 +/- 0.04 and sigma_8L = 0.915 +/-
0.06 (statistical errors only), for a flat Universe with a cosmological
constant. We demonstrate that our measurements contain signal from scales at or
beyond the peak of the 3D power spectrum. We discuss how the results scale with
systematic uncertainties, like the radial selection function. We find that the
central values satisfy the analytically estimated scaling relation. We have
also explored the effects of evolutionary corrections, various truncations of
the KL basis, seeing, sample size and limiting magnitude. We find that the
impact of most of these uncertainties stay within the 2-sigma uncertainties of
our fiducial result.Comment: Fig 1 postscript problem correcte
The Angular Correlation Function of Galaxies from Early SDSS Data
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey is one of the first multicolor photometric and
spectroscopic surveys designed to measure the statistical properties of
galaxies within the local Universe. In this Letter we present some of the
initial results on the angular 2-point correlation function measured from the
early SDSS galaxy data. The form of the correlation function, over the
magnitude interval 18<r*<22, is shown to be consistent with results from
existing wide-field, photographic-based surveys and narrower CCD galaxy
surveys. On scales between 1 arcminute and 1 degree the correlation function is
well described by a power-law with an exponent of ~ -0.7. The amplitude of the
correlation function, within this angular interval, decreases with fainter
magnitudes in good agreement with analyses from existing galaxy surveys. There
is a characteristic break in the correlation function on scales of
approximately 1-2 degrees. On small scales, < 1', the SDSS correlation function
does not appear to be consistent with the power-law form fitted to the 1'<
theta <0.5 deg data. With a data set that is less than 2% of the full SDSS
survey area, we have obtained high precision measurements of the power-law
angular correlation function on angular scales 1' < theta < 1 deg, which are
robust to systematic uncertainties. Because of the limited area and the highly
correlated nature of the error covariance matrix, these initial results do not
yet provide a definitive characterization of departures from the power-law form
at smaller and larger angles. In the near future, however, the area of the SDSS
imaging survey will be sufficient to allow detailed analysis of the small and
large scale regimes, measurements of higher-order correlations, and studies of
angular clustering as a function of redshift and galaxy type
Galaxy Clustering in Early SDSS Redshift Data
We present the first measurements of clustering in the Sloan Digital Sky
Survey (SDSS) galaxy redshift survey. Our sample consists of 29,300 galaxies
with redshifts 5,700 km/s < cz < 39,000 km/s, distributed in several long but
narrow (2.5-5 degree) segments, covering 690 square degrees. For the full,
flux-limited sample, the redshift-space correlation length is approximately 8
Mpc/h. The two-dimensional correlation function \xi(r_p,\pi) shows clear
signatures of both the small-scale, ``fingers-of-God'' distortion caused by
velocity dispersions in collapsed objects and the large-scale compression
caused by coherent flows, though the latter cannot be measured with high
precision in the present sample. The inferred real-space correlation function
is well described by a power law, \xi(r)=(r/6.1+/-0.2 Mpc/h)^{-1.75+/-0.03},
for 0.1 Mpc/h < r < 16 Mpc/h. The galaxy pairwise velocity dispersion is
\sigma_{12} ~ 600+/-100 km/s for projected separations 0.15 Mpc/h < r_p < 5
Mpc/h. When we divide the sample by color, the red galaxies exhibit a stronger
and steeper real-space correlation function and a higher pairwise velocity
dispersion than do the blue galaxies. The relative behavior of subsamples
defined by high/low profile concentration or high/low surface brightness is
qualitatively similar to that of the red/blue subsamples. Our most striking
result is a clear measurement of scale-independent luminosity bias at r < 10
Mpc/h: subsamples with absolute magnitude ranges centered on M_*-1.5, M_*, and
M_*+1.5 have real-space correlation functions that are parallel power laws of
slope ~ -1.8 with correlation lengths of approximately 7.4 Mpc/h, 6.3 Mpc/h,
and 4.7 Mpc/h, respectively.Comment: 51 pages, 18 figures. Replaced to match accepted ApJ versio
Optical and Radio Properties of Extragalactic Sources Observed by the FIRST and SDSS Surveys
We discuss the optical and radio properties of 30,000 FIRST sources
positionally associated with an SDSS source in 1230 deg of sky. The
majority (83%) of the FIRST sources identified with an SDSS source brighter
than r=21 are optically resolved. We estimate an upper limit of 5% for the
fraction of quasars with broad-band optical colors indistinguishable from those
of stars. The distribution of quasars in the radio flux -- optical flux plane
supports the existence of the "quasar radio-dichotomy"; 8% of all quasars with
i<18.5 are radio-loud and this fraction seems independent of redshift and
optical luminosity. The radio-loud quasars have a redder median color by 0.08
mag, and a 3 times larger fraction of objects with red colors. FIRST galaxies
represent 5% of all SDSS galaxies with r<17.5, and 1% for r<20, and are
dominated by red galaxies. Magnitude and redshift limited samples show that
radio galaxies have a different optical luminosity distribution than non-radio
galaxies selected by the same criteria; when galaxies are further separated by
their colors, this result remains valid for both blue and red galaxies. The
distributions of radio-to-optical flux ratio are similar for blue and red
galaxies in redshift-limited samples; this similarity implies that the
difference in their luminosity functions, and resulting selection effects, are
the dominant cause for the preponderance of red radio galaxies in flux-limited
samples. We confirm that the AGN-to-starburst galaxy number ratio increases
with radio flux, and find that radio emission from AGNs is more concentrated
than radio emission from starburst galaxies (abridged).Comment: submitted to AJ, color gif figures, PS figures available from
[email protected]
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