17 research outputs found
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
New Quasars Detected via Variability in the QUEST1 Survey
By observing the high galactic latitude equatorial sky in drift scan mode
with the QUEST (QUasar Equatorial Survey Team) Phase 1 camera, multi-bandpass
photometry on a large strip of sky, resolved over a large range of time scales
(from hourly to biennially) has been collected. A robust method of ensemble
photometry revealed those objects within the scan region that fluctuate in
brightness at a statistically significant level. Subsequent spectroscopic
observations of a subset of those varying objects easily discriminated the
quasars from stars. For a 13-month time scale, 38% of the previously known
quasars within the scan region were seen to vary in brightness and subsequent
spectroscopic observation revealed that approximately 7% of all variable
objects in the scan region are quasars. Increasing the time baseline to 26
months increased the percentage of previously known quasars which vary to 61%
and confirmed via spectroscopy that 7% of the variable objects in the region
are quasars. This reinforces previously published trends and encourages
additional and ongoing synoptic searches for new quasars and their subsequent
analysis. During two spectroscopic observing campaigns, a total of 30 quasars
were confirmed, 11 of which are new discoveries and 19 of which were determined
to be previously known. Using the previously cataloged quasars as a benchmark,
we have found it possible to better optimize future variability surveys. This
paper reports on the subset of variable objects which were spectroscopically
confirmed as quasars.Comment: 22 pages, 3 figures, 4 tables. ApJ, submitted revised version: 19
pages, 4 figures, 2 tables, added clarifications, fixed typos, accepted by
ApJ 24 Jan 200