675 research outputs found
Viewpoints: A high-performance high-dimensional exploratory data analysis tool
Scientific data sets continue to increase in both size and complexity. In the
past, dedicated graphics systems at supercomputing centers were required to
visualize large data sets, but as the price of commodity graphics hardware has
dropped and its capability has increased, it is now possible, in principle, to
view large complex data sets on a single workstation. To do this in practice,
an investigator will need software that is written to take advantage of the
relevant graphics hardware. The Viewpoints visualization package described
herein is an example of such software. Viewpoints is an interactive tool for
exploratory visual analysis of large, high-dimensional (multivariate) data. It
leverages the capabilities of modern graphics boards (GPUs) to run on a single
workstation or laptop. Viewpoints is minimalist: it attempts to do a small set
of useful things very well (or at least very quickly) in comparison with
similar packages today. Its basic feature set includes linked scatter plots
with brushing, dynamic histograms, normalization and outlier detection/removal.
Viewpoints was originally designed for astrophysicists, but it has since been
used in a variety of fields that range from astronomy, quantum chemistry, fluid
dynamics, machine learning, bioinformatics, and finance to information
technology server log mining. In this article, we describe the Viewpoints
package and show examples of its usage.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figures, PASP in press, this version corresponds more
closely to that to be publishe
Brorfelde Schmidt CCD Catalog (BSCC)
The Brorfelde Schmidt CCD Catalog (BSCC) contains about 13.7 million stars,
north of +49 deg Declination with precise positions and V, R photometry. The
catalog has been constructed from the reductions of 18,667 CCD frames observed
with the Brorfelde Schmidt Telescope between 2000 and 2007. The Tycho-2 catalog
was used for astrometric and photometric reference stars. Errors of individual
positions are about 20 to 200 mas for stars in the R = 10 to 18 mag range.
External comparisons with 2MASS and SDSS reveal possible small systematic
errors in the BSCC of up to about 30 mas. The catalog is supplemented with J,
H, and K_s magnitudes from the 2MASS catalog. The catalog data file (about 550
MB ASCII, compressed) will be made available at the Strasbourg Data Center
(CDS).Comment: 16 pages, 22 figures, 2 tables, accepted by A
LOCAL VARIABILITY IN THE ORBIT OF SATURN'S F RING
This work was supported by the Science and Technology Facilities Council (grant number ST/F007566/1)
The KELT-South Telescope
The Kilodegree Extremely Little Telescope (KELT) project is a survey for new
transiting planets around bright stars. KELT-South is a small-aperture,
wide-field automated telescope located at Sutherland, South Africa. The
telescope surveys a set of 26 degree by 26 degree fields around the southern
sky, and targets stars in the range of 8 < V < 10 mag, searching for transits
by Hot Jupiters. This paper describes the KELT-South system hardware and
software and discusses the quality of the observations. We show that KELT-South
is able to achieve the necessary photometric precision to detect transits of
Hot Jupiters around solar-type main-sequence stars.Comment: 26 pages, 13 figure
Searching for links between magnetic fields and stellar evolution. II. The evolution of magnetic fields as revealed by observations of Ap stars in open clusters and associations
The evolution of magnetic fields in Ap stars during the main sequence phase
is presently mostly unconstrained by observation because of the difficulty of
assigning accurate ages to known field Ap stars.
We are carrying out a large survey of magnetic fields in cluster Ap stars
with the goal of obtaining a sample of these stars with well-determined ages.
In this paper we analyse the information available from the survey as it
currently stands.
We select from the available observational sample the stars that are probably
(1) cluster or association members and (2) magnetic Ap stars. For the stars in
this subsample we determine the fundamental parameters T_eff, log(L/L_o), and
M/M_o. With these data and the cluster ages we assign both absolute age and
fractional age (the fraction of the main sequence lifetime completed). For this
purpose we have derived new bolometric corrections for Ap stars.
Magnetic fields are present at the surfaces of Ap stars from the ZAMS to the
TAMS. Statistically for the stars with M > 3 M_o the fields decline with
advancing age approximately as expected from flux conservation together with
increased stellar radius, or perhaps even faster than this rate, on a time
scale of about 3 10^7 yr. In contrast, lower mass stars show no compelling
evidence for field decrease even on a timescale of several times 10^8 yr.
Study of magnetic cluster stars is now a powerful tool for obtaining
constraints on evolution of Ap stars through the main sequence. Enlarging the
sample of known cluster magnetic stars, and obtaining more precise RMS fields,
will help to clarify the results obtained so far. Further field observations
are in progress.Comment: Accepted by Astronomy & Astrophysic
Crystal fields and exchange in dilute alloys of Tb, Dy, and Er in Y studied for different concentrations
All-Sky spectrally matched UBVRI-ZY and u'g'r'i'z' magnitudes for stars in the Tycho2 catalog
We present fitted UBVRI-ZY and u'g'r'i'z' magnitudes, spectral types and
distances for 2.4M stars, derived from synthetic photometry of a library
spectrum that best matches the Tycho2 BtVt, NOMAD Rn and 2MASS JHK_{2/S}
catalog magnitudes. We present similarly synthesized multi-filter magnitudes,
types and distances for 4.8M stars with 2MASS and SDSS photometry to g<16
within the Sloan survey region, for Landolt and Sloan primary standards, and
for Sloan Northern (PT) and Southern secondary standards.
The synthetic magnitude zeropoints for BtVt, UBVRI, ZvYv, JHK_{2/S},
JHK_{MKO}, Stromgren uvby, Sloan u'g'r'i'z' and ugriz are calibrated on 20
calspec spectrophotometric standards. The UBVRI and ugriz zeropoints have
dispersions of 1--3%, for standards covering a range of color from -0.3 < V-I <
4.6; those for other filters are in the range 2--5%.
The spectrally matched fits to Tycho2 stars provide estimated 1-sigma errors
per star of ~0.2, 0.15, 0.12, 0.10 and 0.08 mags respectively in either UBVRI
or u'g'r'i'z'; those for at least 70% of the SDSS survey region to g<16 have
estimated 1-sigma errors per star of ~0.2, 0.06, 0.04, 0.04, 0.05 in u'g'r'i'z'
or UBVRI.
The density of Tycho2 stars, averaging about 60 stars per square degree,
provides sufficient stars to enable automatic flux calibrations for most
digital images with fields of view of 0.5 degree or more. Using several such
standards per field, automatic flux calibration can be achieved to a few
percent in any filter, at any airmass, in most workable observing conditions,
to facilitate inter-comparison of data from different sites, telescopes and
instruments.Comment: 36 pages, 30 figures, 3 printed tables, several electronic tables,
accepted PASP Dec 201
The Carlsberg Meridian Telescope CCD Drift Scan Survey
This paper contains the general data reduction methods used in processing the
data from the Carlsberg Meridian Telescope CCD Drift Scan Survey. An efficient
method to calibrate the fluctuations in the positions of the images caused by
atmospheric turbulence is described. The external accuracy achieved is 36 mas
in right ascension and declination. A description of the recently released
catalogue is given.Comment: 13 pages 11 Figures (PS) Accepted for publication in A&A. The
catalogue can be found at http://www.ast.cam.ac.uk/~dwe/SRF/cmc12
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