136 research outputs found
The second US Naval Observatory CCD Astrograph Catalog (UCAC2)
The second USNO CCD Astrograph Catalog, UCAC2 was released in July 2003.
Positions and proper motions for 48,330,571 sources (mostly stars) are
available on 3 CDs, supplemented with 2MASS photometry for 99.5% of the
sources. The catalog covers the sky area from -90 to +40 degrees declination,
going up to +52 in some areas; this completely supersedes the UCAC1 released in
2001. Current epoch positions are obtained from observations with the USNO
8-inch Twin Astrograph equipped with a 4k CCD camera. The precision of the
positions are 15 to 70 mas, depending on magnitude, with estimated systematic
errors of 10 mas or below. Proper motions are derived by utilizing over 140
ground-and space-based catalogs, including Hipparcos/Tycho, the AC2000.2, as
well as yet unpublished re-measures of the AGK2 plates and scans from the NPM
and SPM plates. Proper motion errors are about 1 to 3 mas/yr for stars to 12th
magnitude, and about 4 to 7 mas/yr for fainter stars to 16th magnitude. The
observational data, astrometric reductions, results, and important information
for the users of this catalog are presented.Comment: accepted by AJ, AAS LaTeX, 14 figures, 10 table
Chandra observations of the pulsar wind nebula in SNR G0.9+0.1
We present observations with the Chandra X-ray Observatory of the pulsar wind
nebula (PWN) within the supernova remnant G0.9+0.1. At Chandra's high
resolution, the PWN has a clear axial symmetry; a faint X-ray point source
lying along the symmetry axis possibly corresponds to the pulsar itself. We
argue that the nebular morphology can be explained in terms of a torus of
emission in the pulsar's equatorial plane and a jet directed along the pulsar
spin axis, as is seen in the X-ray nebulae powered by other young pulsars. A
bright clump of emission within the PWN breaks the axisymmetry and may
correspond to an intermediate-latitude feature in the pulsar wind.Comment: 5 pages, 2 embedded EPS figures, uses emulateapj.sty . Accepted to
ApJ Letter
Contact binaries with additional components. III. The adaptive optics detections
We present results of the CFHT adaptive optics search for companions of a
homogeneous group of contact binary stars, as a contribution to our attempts to
prove a hypothesis that these binaries require a third star to become so close
as observed. In addition to companions directly discovered at separations of
>=1", we introduced a new method of AO image analysis utilizing distortions of
the AO diffraction ring pattern at separations of 0.07"-1". Very close
companions, with separations in the latter range were discovered in systems HV
Aqr, OO Aql, CK Boo, XY Leo, BE Scl, and RZ Tau. More distant companions were
detected in V402 Aur, AO Cam, V2082 Cyg. Our results provide a contribution to
the mounting evidence that the presence of close companions is a very common
phenomenon for very close binaries with orbital periods <1 day.Comment: Full Figs.4 and 5 are in
http://www.astro.utoronto.ca/~rucinski/Triples3
Do the nearby BHB stars belong to the Thick Disk or the Halo?
We study the Milky Way region Z<3.0 kpc, where the thick disk and inner halo
overlap, by using the kinematics of local blue horizontal branch (BHB) stars
(within 1 kpc) and new samples of BHB stars and A-type stars from the Century
Survey. We derive Galactic U,V,W velocities for these BHB and A-type star
samples using proper motions from the NOMAD catalog. The mean velocities and
the velocity dispersions of the BHB samples (Z<3 kpc) are characteristic of the
halo, while those of the Century Survey A-type stars are characteristic of the
thick disk. There is no evidence from our samples that the BHB stars rotate
with the thick disk in the region Z<3 kpc. Nearly a third of the nearby local
RR Lyrae stars have disk kinematics and are more metal-rich than [Fe/H]~-1.
Only a few percent of the Century Survey BHB stars have these properties. Only
one nearby BHB star (HD 130201) is likely to be such a disk star but selection
based on high proper motions will have tended to exclude such stars from the
local sample. The scale height derived from a sample of local RR Lyrae stars
agrees with that of the Century Survey BHB stars. The local samples of BHB
stars and metal-weak red giants are too incomplete for a similar comparison.Comment: 14 pages, accepted to A
Low Luminosity Companions to White Dwarfs
This paper presents results of a near-infrared imaging survey for low mass
stellar and substellar companions to white dwarfs. A wide field proper motion
survey of 261 white dwarfs was capable of directly detecting companions at
orbital separations between and 5000 AU with masses as low as 0.05
, while a deep near field search of 86 white dwarfs was capable of
directly detecting companions at separations between and 1100 AU with
masses as low as 0.02 . Additionally, all white dwarf targets were
examined for near-infrared excess emission, a technique capable of detecting
companions at arbitrarily close separations down to masses of 0.05 .
No brown dwarf candidates were detected, which implies a brown dwarf
companion fraction of % for white dwarfs. In contrast, the stellar
companion fraction of white dwarfs as measured by this survey is 22%,
uncorrected for bias. Moreover, most of the known and suspected stellar
companions to white dwarfs are low mass stars whose masses are only slightly
greater than the masses of brown dwarfs. Twenty previously unknown stellar
companions were detected, five of which are confirmed or likely white dwarfs
themselves, while fifteen are confirmed or likely low mass stars.
Similar to the distribution of cool field dwarfs as a function of spectral
type, the number of cool unevolved dwarf companions peaks at mid-M type. Based
on the present work, relative to this peak, field L dwarfs appear to be roughly
2-3 times more abundant than companion L dwarfs. Additionally, there is no
evidence that the initial companion masses have been altered by post main
sequence binary interactions.Comment: 149 pages, 59 figures, 11 tables, accepted to ApJ Supplement
Observation of the first gravitational microlensing event in a sparse stellar field : the Tago event
We report the observation of the first gravitational microlensing event in a
sparse stellar field, involving the brightest (V=11.4 mag) andclosest (~ 1 kpc)
source star to date. This event was discovered by an amateurastronomer, A.
Tago, on 2006 October 31 as a transient brightening, by ~4.5 mag during a ~15
day period, of a normal A-type star (GSC 3656-1328) in the Cassiopeia
constellation. Analysis of both spectroscopic observations and the light curve
indicates that this event was caused by gravitational microlensing rather than
an intrinsically variable star. Discovery of this single event over a 30 year
period is roughly consistent with the expected microlensing rate for the whole
sky down to V = 12 mag stars. However, the probability for finding events with
such a high magnification (~ 50) is much smaller, by a factor ~1/50, which
implies that the true event rate may be higher than expected. This discovery
indicates the potential of all sky variability surveys, employing frequent
sampling by telescopes with small apertures and wide fields of view, for
finding such rare transient events, and using the observations to explore
galactic disk structure and search for exo-planets.Comment: 13 pages, 2 tables, 3 figures, accepted by Ap
51 Eri and GJ 3305: A 10-15 Myr old binary star system at 30 parsecs
Following the suggestion of Zuckerman et al. (2001, ApJ, 562, L87), we
consider the evidence that 51 Eri (spectral type F0) and GJ 3305 (M0),
historically classified as unrelated main sequence stars in the solar
neighborhood, are instead a wide physical binary system and members of the
young beta Pic moving group (BPMG). The BPMG is the nearest (d < 50 pc) of
several groups of young stars with ages around 10 Myr that are kinematically
convergent with the Oph-Sco-Cen Association (OSCA), the nearest OB star
association. Combining SAAO optical photometry, Hobby-Eberly Telescope
high-resolution spectroscopy, Chandra X-ray data, and UCAC2 catalog kinematics,
we confirm with high confidence that the system is indeed extremely young. GJ
3305 itself exhibits very strong magnetic activity but has rapidly depleted
most of its lithium. The 51 Eri/GJ 3305 system is the westernmost known member
of the OSCA, lying 110 pc from the main subgroups. The system is similar to the
BPMG wide binary HD 172555/CD -64d1208 and the HD 104237 quintet, suggesting
that dynamically fragile multiple systems can survive the turbulent
environments of their natal giant molecular cloud complexes, while still being
imparted high dispersion velocities. Nearby young systems such as these are
excellent targets for evolved circumstellar disk and planetary studies, having
stellar ages comparable to that of the late phases of planet formation.Comment: 27 pages, 7 figures. Accepted for publication in the Astronomical
Journal. For a version with high resolution figures, see
http://www.astro.psu.edu/users/edf/51Eri.pd
Transit Target Selection Using Reduced Proper Motions
In searches for planetary transits in the field, well over half of the survey
stars are typically giants or other stars that are too large to permit
straightforward detection of planets. For all-sky searches of bright V<~11
stars, the fraction is ~90%. We show that the great majority of these
contaminants can be removed from the sample by analyzing their reduced proper
motions (RPMs): giants have much lower RPMs than dwarfs of the same color. We
use Hipparcos data to design a RPM selection function that eliminates most
evolved stars, while rejecting only 9% of viable transit targets. Our method
can be applied using existing or soon-to-be-released all-sky data to stars
V<12.5 in the northern hemisphere and V<12 in the south. The method degrades at
fainter magnitudes, but does so gracefully. For example, at V=14 it can still
be used to eliminate giants redward of V-I~0.95, that is, the blue edge of the
red giant clump.Comment: Submitted to ApJ, 17 pages including 6 figure
A platform for the discovery of new macrolide antibiotics.
The chemical modification of structurally complex fermentation products, a process known as semisynthesis, has been an important tool in the discovery and manufacture of antibiotics for the treatment of various infectious diseases. However, many of the therapeutics obtained in this way are no longer effective, because bacterial resistance to these compounds has developed. Here we present a practical, fully synthetic route to macrolide antibiotics by the convergent assembly of simple chemical building blocks, enabling the synthesis of diverse structures not accessible by traditional semisynthetic approaches. More than 300 new macrolide antibiotic candidates, as well as the clinical candidate solithromycin, have been synthesized using our convergent approach. Evaluation of these compounds against a panel of pathogenic bacteria revealed that the majority of these structures had antibiotic activity, some efficacious against strains resistant to macrolides in current use. The chemistry we describe here provides a platform for the discovery of new macrolide antibiotics and may also serve as the basis for their manufacture
ROTSE All Sky Surveys for Variable Stars I: Test Fields
The ROTSE-I experiment has generated CCD photometry for the entire Northern
sky in two epochs nightly since March 1998. These sky patrol data are a
powerful resource for studies of astrophysical transients. As a demonstration
project, we present first results of a search for periodic variable stars
derived from ROTSE-I observations. Variable identification, period
determination, and type classification are conducted via automatic algorithms.
In a set of nine ROTSE-I sky patrol fields covering about 2000 square degrees
we identify 1781 periodic variable stars with mean magnitudes between m_v=10.0
and m_v=15.5. About 90% of these objects are newly identified as variable.
Examples of many familiar types are presented. All classifications for this
study have been manually confirmed. The selection criteria for this analysis
have been conservatively defined, and are known to be biased against some
variable classes. This preliminary study includes only 5.6% of the total
ROTSE-I sky coverage, suggesting that the full ROTSE-I variable catalog will
include more than 32,000 periodic variable stars.Comment: Accepted for publication in AJ 4/00. LaTeX manuscript. (28 pages, 11
postscript figures and 1 gif
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