7,964 research outputs found
The Effect of Unresolved Contaminant Stars on the Cross-Matching of Photometric Catalogues
A fundamental process in astrophysics is the matching of two photometric
catalogues. It is crucial that the correct objects be paired, and that their
photometry does not suffer from any spurious additional flux. We compare the
positions of sources in WISE, IPHAS, 2MASS, and APASS with Gaia DR1 astrometric
positions. We find that the separations are described by a combination of a
Gaussian distribution, wider than naively assumed based on their quoted
uncertainties, and a large wing, which some authors ascribe to proper motions.
We show that this is caused by flux contamination from blended stars not
treated separately. We provide linear fits between the quoted Gaussian
uncertainty and the core fit to the separation distributions.
We show that at least one in three of the stars in the faint half of a given
catalogue will suffer from flux contamination above the 1% level when the
density of catalogue objects per PSF area is above approximately 0.005. This
has important implications for the creation of composite catalogues. It is
important for any closest neighbour matches as there will be a given fraction
of matches that are flux contaminated, while some matches will be missed due to
significant astrometric perturbation by faint contaminants. In the case of
probability-based matching, this contamination affects the probability density
function of matches as a function of distance. This effect results in up to 50%
fewer counterparts being returned as matches, assuming Gaussian astrometric
uncertainties for WISE-Gaia matching in crowded Galactic plane regions,
compared with a closest neighbour match.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures; accepted for publication in the Monthly Notices
of the Royal Astronomical Societ
Low Mass Stars and Brown Dwarfs around Sigma Orionis
We present optical spectroscopy of 71 photometric candidate low-mass members
of the cluster associated with Sigma Orionis. Thirty-five of these are found to
pass the lithium test and hence are confirmed as true cluster members, covering
a mass range of <0.055-0.3M_{sun}, assuming a mean cluster age of <5 Myr. We
find evidence for an age spread on the (I, I-J) colour magnitude diagram,
members appearing to lie in the range 1-7 Myr. There are, however, a
significant fraction of candidates that are non-members, including some
previously identified as members based on photometry alone. We see some
evidence that the ratio of spectroscopically confirmed members to photometric
candidates decreases with brightness and mass. This highlights the importance
of spectroscopy in determining the true initial mass-function.Comment: To appear in the 12th Cambridge Workshop on Cool Stars Stellar
Systems and the Su
Recommended from our members
VIPER : a 25-MHz, 100-MIPS peak VLIW micro-processor
This paper describes the design and implementation of a very long instruction word (VLIW) microprocessor. The VIPER (VLIW integer processor) contains four pipelined functional units, and can achieve 100 MIPS peak performance at 25 MHz. The procesor is capable of performing multiway branch operations, two load/store operations and up to four ALU operations in each clock cycle, with full register file access to each functional unit. VIPER is the first VLIW microprocessor known that can achieve this level of performance. Designed in twelve months, the processor is integrated with an instruction cache controller and a data cache, requiring 450,000 transistors and a die size of 12.9 by 9.1 mm in a 1.2 µm technology
Digital data averager improves conventional measurement system performance
Multipurpose digital averager provides measurement improvement in noisy signal environments. It provides increased measurement accuracy and resolution to basic instrumentation devices by an arithmetical process in real time. It is used with standard conventional measurement equipment and digital data printers
Recommended from our members
VLSI design of the tiny RISC microprocessor
This report describes the Tiny RISC microprocessor designed at UC Irvine. Tiny RISC is a 16-bit microprocessor and has a RISC-style architecture. The chip was fabricated by MOSIS [1] in a 2μm n-well CMOS technology. The processor has a cycle time of 70 ns
Dynamic optimal taxation with human capital.
This paper revisits the dynamic optimal taxation results of Jones, Manuelli, and Rossi (1993, 1997). They use a growth model with human capital and find that optimal taxes on both capital income and labor income converge to zero in steady state. For one of the models under consideration, I show that the representative household's problem does not have an interior solution. This raises concerns since these corners are inconsistent with aggregate data. Interiority is restored if preferences are modified so that human capital augments the value of leisure time. With this change, the optimal tax problem is analyzed and, reassuringly, the Jones, Manuelli, and Rossi results are confirmed: neither capital income nor labor income should be taxed in steady state
- …