721 research outputs found

    Proper Motions of Faint UV-Bright Sources in the Sandage Two-color Survey of the Galactic Plane

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    Proper motions with values >10 mas/yr or <-10 mas/yr have been extracted from the USNO-B1.0 and Tycho II catalogues for all Lanning UV-bright sources identified in the Sandage Two-color Survey of the Galactic Plane and presented in Papers I-VI. Of the 572 sources examined, we find at least 213 which exhibit a significantly large proper motion. Based on the location of the sources in a reduced proper motion diagram, we demonstrate that about two thirds of the high proper motion sources are likely or very likely to be heretofore unidentified white dwarfs.Comment: 15 pages, to appear in Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacifi

    Hipparcos absolute magnitudes for metal rich K giants and the calibration of DDO photometry

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    Parallaxes for 581 bright K giants have been determined using the Hipparcos satellite. We combine the trigonometric parallaxes with ground based photometric data to determine the K giant absolute magnitudes. For all these giants, absolute magnitude estimates can also be made using the intermediate band photometric DDO system (Janes 1975, 1979). We compare the DDO absolute magnitudes with the very accurate Hipparcos absolute magnitudes, finding various systematic offsets in the DDO system. These systematic effects can be corrected, and we provide a new calibration of the DDO system allowing absolute magnitude to be determined with an accuracy of 0.35 mag in the range 2 > M_V > -1. The new calibration performs well when tested on K giants with DDO photometry in a selection of low reddening open-clusters with well-measured distance moduli.Comment: Submitted to MNRAS. 7 pages, 6 figures, MNRAS style file also available at http://astro.utu.fi/~cflynn/projects4.htm

    Calibrated griz magnitudes of Tycho stars: All-sky photometric calibration using bright stars

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    Photometric calibration to 5% accuracy is frequently needed at arbitrary celestial locations; however, existing all-sky astronomical catalogs do not reach this accuracy and time consuming photometric calibration procedures are required. I fit the Hipparcos B_T and V_T magnitudes along with the 2MASS J, H, and K magnitudes of Tycho-2 catalog-stars with stellar spectral templates. From the best fit spectral template derived for each star, I calculate the synthetic SDSS griz magnitudes and constructed an all-sky catalog of griz magnitudes for bright stars (V<12). Testing this method on SDSS photometric telescope observations, I find that the photometric accuracy for a single star is usually about 0.12, 0.12, 0.10 and 0.08 mag (1 sigma), for the g, r, i, and z-bands, respectively. However, by using ~10 such stars, the typical errors per calibrated field (systematic + statistical) can be reduced to about 0.04, 0.03, 0.02, and 0.02,mag, in the g, r, i, and z-bands, respectively. Therefore, in cases for which several calibration stars can be observed in the field of view of an instrument, accurate photometric calibration is possible.Comment: 3 pages, PASP, in pres

    Roots in 3-manifold topology

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    Let C be some class of objects equipped with a set of simplifying moves. When we apply these to a given object M in C as long as possible, we get a root of M. Our main result is that under certain conditions the root of any object exists and is unique. We apply this result to different situations and get several new results and new proofs of known results. Among them there are a new proof of the Kneser-Milnor prime decomposition theorem for 3-manifolds and different versions of this theorem for cobordisms, knotted graphs, and orbifolds.Comment: This is the version published by Geometry & Topology Monographs on 29 April 200

    Chandra Observations of Low Mass X-ray Binaries and Diffuse Gas in the Early-Type Galaxies NGC 4365 and NGC 4382 (M85)

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    (Abridged) We used the Chandra X-ray Observatory ACIS S3 to image the X-ray faint elliptical galaxy NGC 4365 and lenticular galaxy NGC 4382. The observations resolve much of the X-ray emission into 99 and 58 sources, respectively, most of which are low-mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs) associated with each of the galaxies. We identify 18 out of the 37 X-ray sources in a central field in NGC 4365 with globular clusters. The luminosity functions of the resolved sources for both galaxies are best fit with cutoff power-laws whose cutoff luminosity is ≈0.9−3.1×1039\approx 0.9 - 3.1 \times 10^{39} ergs s−1^{-1}. These luminosities are much larger than those previously measured for similar galaxies; we do not find evidence for a break in the luminosity function at the Eddington luminosity of a 1.4 M⊙M_\odot neutron star. The spatial distributions of the resolved sources for both galaxies are broader than the distribution of optical stars. In both galaxies, a hard power-law model fits the summed spectrum of all of the sources. The unresolved emission is best fit by the sum of a soft mekal model representing emission from diffuse gas, and a hard power-law, presumed to be from unresolved LMXBs. A standard beta model fits the radial distribution of the diffuse gas in both galaxies. In the elliptical NGC 4365, the best-fit core radius is very small, while the S0 galaxy NGC 4382 has a larger core radius. This may indicate that the gas in NGC 4382 is rotating significantly.Comment: Astrophysical Journal, accepted: 38 pages with 20 embedded reduced resolution Postscript figure

    Comparing Tycho-2 Astrometry with UCAC1

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    The Tycho-2 Catalogue, released in February 2000, is based on the ESA Hipparcos space mission data and various ground-based catalogs for proper motions. An external comparison of the Tycho-2 astrometry is presented here using the first U.S. Naval Observatory CCD Astrograph Catalog (UCAC1). The UCAC1 data were obtained from observations performed at CTIO between February 1998 and November 1999, using the 206 mm aperture 5-element lens astrograph and a 4k x 4k CCD. Only small systematic differences in position between Tycho-2 and UCAC1 up to 15 milliarcseconds (mas) are found, mainly as a function of magnitude. The standard deviations of the distributions of the position differences are in the 35 to 140 mas range, depending on magnitude. The observed scatter in the position differences is about 30% larger than expected from the combined formal, internal errors, also depending on magnitude. The Tycho-2 Catalogue has the more precise positions for bright stars (V <= 10 mag) while the UCAC1 positions are significantly better at the faint end (11 mag <= V <= 12.5 mag) of the magnitude range in common. UCAC1 goes much fainter (to R=16) than Tycho-2; however complete sky coverage is not expected before mid 2003.Comment: LaTeX, 8 pages, 3 PS figures, accepted by AJ (Aug 2000) see also http://ad.usno.navy.mil/ad/ucac/ request for UCAC1 CD-ROM: e-mail to [email protected] request for Tycho-2 CD-ROM: e-mail to [email protected] or [email protected]

    Revised Coordinates and Proper Motions of the Stars in the Luyten Half-Second Catalogue

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    We present refined coordinates and proper motion data for the high proper motion (HPM) stars in the Luyten Half-Second (LHS) catalogue. The positional uncertainty in the original Luyten catalogue is typically >10" and is often >30". We have used the digital scans of the Palomar Observatory Sky Survey (POSS) I and POSS II plates to derive more accurate positions and proper motions of the objects. Out of the 4470 candidates in the LHS catalogue, 4323 objects were manually re-identified in the POSS I and POSS II scans. A small fraction of the stars were not found due to the lack of finder charts and digitized POSS II scans. The uncertainties in the revised positions are typically ~2", but can be as high as ~8" in a few cases; this is a large improvement over the original data. Cross-correlation with the Tycho-2 and Hipparcos catalogues yielded 819 candidates (with m_R < 12). For these brighter sources, the position and proper motion data have been replaced with the more accurate Tycho/Hipparcos data. In total, we have revised proper motion measurements and coordinates for 4040 stars and revised coordinates for 4330 stars, which are presented here.Comment: 108 pages. Accepted for Publication in ApJ Suppl. Some errors caused by the transcription errors in the original LHS catalogue have been corrected in this resubmission. The most current version of the catalogue is also available online at http://www.stsci.edu/~ksahu/lh

    Secure Identification of Free-Floating Planets

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    Among the methods proposed to detect extrasolar planets, microlensing is the only technique that can detect free-floating planets. Free-floating planets are detected through the channel of short-duration isolated lensing events. However, if a seemingly isolated planetary event is detected, it is difficult to firmly conclude that the event is caused by a free-floating planet because a wide-separation planet can also produce an isolated event. There were several methods proposed to break the degeneracy between the isolated planetary events produced by the free-floating and wide-separation planets, but they are incomplete. In this paper, we show that free-floating planets can be securely identified by conducting astrometric follow-up observations of isolated events to be detected in future photometric lensing surveys by using high-precision interferometers to be operated contemporarily with the photometric surveys. The method is based on the fact that astrometric lensing effect covers much longer range of the lens-source separation than the photometric effect. We demonstrate that several astrometric follow-up observations of isolated planetary events associated with source stars brighter than V∌19V\sim 19 by using the {\it Space Interferometry Mission} with an exposure time of â‰Č10min\lesssim 10 {\rm min} for each observation will make it possible to measure the centroid shift induced by primaries with projected separations up to ∌100AU\sim 100 {\rm AU}. Therefore, the proposed method is far more complete than previously proposed methods that are flawed by the limited applicability only to planets with projected separations â‰Č20AU\lesssim 20 {\rm AU} or planets accompanied by bright primaries.Comment: 5 pages including 2 figure
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