169 research outputs found
Photometry of Variable Stars from THU-NAOC Transient Survey I: The First 2 Years
In this paper, we report the detections of stellar variabilities from the
first 2-year observations of sky area of about 1300 square degrees from the
Tsinghua University-NAOC Transient Survey (TNTS). A total of 1237 variable
stars (including 299 new ones) were detected with brightness < 18.0 mag and
magnitude variation >= 0.1 mag on a timescale from a few hours to few hundred
days. Among such detections, we tentatively identified 661 RR Lyrae stars, 431
binaries, 72 Semiregular pulsators, 29 Mira stars, 11 slow irregular variables,
11 RS Canum Venaticorum stars, 7 Gamma Doradus stars, 5 long period variables,
3 W Virginis stars, 3 Delta Scuti stars, 2 Anomalous Cepheids, 1 Cepheid, and 1
nove-like star based on their time-series variability index Js and their phased
diagrams. Moreover, we found that 14 RR Lyrae stars show the Blazhko effect and
67 contact eclipsing binaries exhibit the O'Connell effect. Since the period
and amplitude of light variations of RR Lyrae variables depend on their
chemical compositions, their photometric observations can be used to
investigate distribution of metallicity along the direction perpendicular to
the Galactic disk. We find that the metallicity of RR Lyrae stars shows large
scatter at regions closer to the Galactic plane (e.g., -3.0 < [Fe/H] < 0) but
tends to converge at [Fe/H]~ -1.7 at larger Galactic latitudes. This variation
may be related to that the RRAB Lyrae stars in the Galactic halo come from
globular clusters with different metallicity and vertical distances, i.e. OoI
and OoII populations, favoring for the dual-halo model.Comment: 18 pages, 19 figures, published in AJ, 150, 10
Project Overview of the Beijing-Arizona Sky Survey
The Beijing-Arizona Sky Survey (BASS) is a wide-field two-band photometric
survey of the Northern Galactic Cap using the 90Prime imager on the 2.3 m Bok
telescope at Kitt Peak. It is a four-year collaboration between the National
Astronomical Observatory of China and Steward Observatory, the University of
Arizona, serving as one of the three imaging surveys to provide photometric
input catalogs for target selection of the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument
(DESI) project. BASS will take up to 240 dark/grey nights to cover an area of
about 5400 deg in the and bands. The 5 limiting AB
magnitudes for point sources in the two bands, corrected for the Galactic
extinction, are 24.0 and 23.4 mag, respectively. BASS, together with other DESI
imaging surveys, will provide unique science opportunities that cover a wide
range of topics in both Galactic and extragalactic astronomy.Comment: 10 pages, submitted to PAS
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