77 research outputs found
Optical Multicolor Photometry of Spectrophotometric Standard Stars
Photoelectric data on the Johnson-Kron-Cousins UBVRI broadband photometric
system are provided for a set of stars which have been used as
spectrophotometric standard stars at the Hubble Space Telescope.Comment: 76 pages, 48 figures - published version available here:
http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/AJ/journal/issues/v133n3/205588/205588.html
. Also see ERRATUM at:
http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/AJ/journal/issues/v133n5/205838/205838.htm
The Origin of the Mass--Metallicity Relation: Insights from 53,000 Star-Forming Galaxies in the SDSS
We utilize Sloan Digital Sky Survey imaging and spectroscopy of ~53,000
star-forming galaxies at z~0.1 to study the relation between stellar mass and
gas-phase metallicity. We derive gas-phase oxygen abundances and stellar masses
using new techniques which make use of the latest stellar evolutionary
synthesis and photoionization models. We find a tight (+/-0.1 dex) correlation
between stellar mass and metallicity spanning over 3 orders of magnitude in
stellar mass and a factor of 10 in metallicity. The relation is relatively
steep from 10^{8.5} - 10^{10.5} M_sun, in good accord with known trends between
luminosity and metallicity, but flattens above 10^{10.5} M_sun. We use indirect
estimates of the gas mass based on the H-alpha luminosity to compare our data
to predictions from simple closed box chemical evolution models. We show that
metal loss is strongly anti-correlated with baryonic mass, with low mass dwarf
galaxies being 5 times more metal-depleted than L* galaxies at z~0.1. Evidence
for metal depletion is not confined to dwarf galaxies, but is found in galaxies
with masses as high as 10^{10} M_sun. We interpret this as strong evidence both
of the ubiquity of galactic winds and of their effectiveness in removing metals
from galaxy potential wells.Comment: ApJ accepted, 15 pages, 9 figures, emulateapj.st
The Discovery of a Second Field Methane Brown Dwarf from Sloan Digital Sky Survey Commissioning Data
We report the discovery of a second field methane brown dwarf from the
commissioning data of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). The object, SDSS
J134646.45-003150.4 (SDSS 1346-00), was selected because of its very red color
and stellar appearance. Its spectrum between 0.8-2.5 mic is dominated by strong
absorption bands of H_2O and CH_4 and closely mimics those of Gliese 229B and
SDSS 162414.37+002915.6 (SDSS 1624+00), two other known methane brown dwarfs.
SDSS 1346-00 is approximately 1.5 mag fainter than Gliese 229B, suggesting that
it lies about 11 pc from the sun. The ratio of flux at 2.1 mic to that at 1.27
mic is larger for SDSS 1346-00 than for Gliese 229B and SDSS 1624+00, which
suggests that SDSS 1346-00 has a slightly higher effective temperature than the
others. Based on a search area of 130 sq. deg. and a detection limit of z* =
19.8, we estimate a space density of 0.05 pc^-3 for methane brown dwarfs with
T_eff ~ 1000 K in the 40 pc^3 volume of our search. This estimate is based on
small-sample statistics and should be treated with appropriate caution.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, AASTeX, to appear in ApJ Letters, authors list
update
The u'g'r'i'z' Standard Star Network
We present the 158 standard stars that define the u'g'r'i'z' photometric
system. These stars form the basis for the photometric calibration of the Sloan
Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). The defining instrument system and filters, the
observing process, the reduction techniques, and the software used to create
the stellar network are all described. We briefly discuss the history of the
star selection process, the derivation of a set of transformation equations for
the UBVRcIc system, and plans for future work.Comment: References to URLs in paper have been updated to reflect moved
website. Accepted by AJ. 50 pages, including 20 pages of text, 9 tables, and
15 figures. Plain ASCII text versions of Tables 8 and 9 can be found at
http://home.fnal.gov/~dtucker/ugriz/index.html (new URL
The Luminosity and Mass Functions of Low-Mass Stars in the Galactic Disk: I. The Calibration Region
We present measurements of the luminosity and mass functions of low-mass
stars constructed from a catalog of matched Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and
2 Micron All Sky Survey (2MASS) detections. This photometric catalog contains
more than 25,000 matched SDSS and 2MASS point sources spanning ~30 square
degrees on the sky. We have obtained follow-up spectroscopy, complete to J=16,
of more than 500 low mass dwarf candidates within a 1 square degree sub-sample,
and thousands of additional dwarf candidates in the remaining 29 square
degrees. This spectroscopic sample verifies that the photometric sample is
complete, uncontaminated, and unbiased at the 99% level globally, and at the
95% level in each color range. We use this sample to derive the luminosity and
mass functions of low-mass stars over nearly a decade in mass (0.7 M_sun > M_*
> 0.1 M_sun). We find that the logarithmically binned mass function is best fit
with an M_c=0.29 log-normal distribution, with a 90% confidence interval of
M_c=0.20--0.50. These 90% confidence intervals correspond to linearly binned
mass functions peaking between 0.27 M_sun and 0.12 M_sun, where the best fit MF
turns over at 0.17 M_sun. A power law fit to the entire mass range sampled
here, however, returns a best fit of alpha=1.1 (where the Salpeter slope is
alpha = 2.35). These results agree well with most previous investigations,
though differences in the analytic formalisms adopted to describe those mass
functions can give the false impression of disagreement. Given the richness of
modern-day astronomical datasets, we are entering the regime whereby stronger
conclusions can be drawn by comparing the actual datapoints measured in
different mass functions, rather than the results of analytic analyses that
impose structure on the data a priori. (abridged)Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journal. 21 pages,
emulateapj format, 12 figures. Figures 1, 4, 11 and 12 degraded for astroph;
full resolution version available for download at
http://www.cfa.harvard.edu/~kcovey
An Initial Survey of White Dwarfs in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
An initial assessment is made of white dwarf and hot subdwarf stars observed
in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. In a small area of sky (190 square degrees),
observed much like the full survey will be, 269 white dwarfs and 56 hot
subdwarfs are identified spectroscopically where only 44 white dwarfs and 5 hot
subdwarfs were known previously. Most are ordinary DA (hydrogen atmosphere) and
DB (helium) types. In addition, in the full survey to date, a number of WDs
have been found with uncommon spectral types. Among these are blue DQ stars
displaying lines of atomic carbon; red DQ stars showing molecular bands of C_2
with a wide variety of strengths; DZ stars where Ca and occasionally Mg, Na,
and/or Fe lines are detected; and magnetic WDs with a wide range of magnetic
field strengths in DA, DB, DQ, and (probably) DZ spectral types. Photometry
alone allows identification of stars hotter than 12000 K, and the density of
these stars for 15<g<20 is found to be ~2.2 deg^{-2} at Galactic latitudes
29-62 deg. Spectra are obtained for roughly half of these hot stars. The
spectra show that, for 15<g<17, 40% of hot stars are WDs and the fraction of
WDs rises to ~90% at g=20. The remainder are hot sdB and sdO stars.Comment: Accepted for AJ; 43 pages, including 12 figures and 5 table
The u\u27g\u27r\u27i\u27z\u27 Standard Star Setwork
We present the 158 standard stars that define the u\u27g\u27r\u27i\u27z\u27 photometric system. These stars form the basis for the photometric calibration of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). The defining instrument system and filters, the observing process, the reduction techniques, and the software used to create the stellar network are all described. We briefly discuss the history of the star selection process, the derivation of a set of transformation equations for the UBVRcIc system, and plans for future work. (Refer to PDF file for exact formulas)
The Milky Way Tomography With SDSS. III. Stellar Kinematics
We study Milky Way kinematics using a sample of 18.8 million main-sequence stars with r 20 degrees). We find that in the region defined by 1 kpc < Z < 5 kpc and 3 kpc < R < 13 kpc, the rotational velocity for disk stars smoothly decreases, and all three components of the velocity dispersion increase, with distance from the Galactic plane. In contrast, the velocity ellipsoid for halo stars is aligned with a spherical coordinate system and appears to be spatially invariant within the probed volume. The velocity distribution of nearby (Z < 1 kpc) K/M stars is complex, and cannot be described by a standard Schwarzschild ellipsoid. For stars in a distance-limited subsample of stars (< 100 pc), we detect a multi-modal velocity distribution consistent with that seen by HIPPARCOS. This strong non-Gaussianity significantly affects the measurements of the velocity-ellipsoid tilt and vertex deviation when using the Schwarzschild approximation. We develop and test a simple descriptive model for the overall kinematic behavior that captures these features over most of the probed volume, and can be used to search for substructure in kinematic and metallicity space. We use this model to predict further improvements in kinematic mapping of the Galaxy expected from Gaia and the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope.NSF AST-615991, AST-0707901, AST-0551161, AST-02-38683, AST-06-07634, AST-0807444, PHY05-51164NASA NAG5-13057, NAG5-13147, NNXO-8AH83GPhysics Frontier Center/Joint Institute for Nuclear Astrophysics (JINA) PHY 08-22648U.S. National Science FoundationMarie Curie Research Training Network ELSA (European Leadership in Space Astrometry) MRTN-CT-2006-033481Fermi Research Alliance, LLC, United States Department of Energy DE-AC02-07CH11359Alfred P. Sloan FoundationParticipating InstitutionsJapanese MonbukagakushoMax Planck SocietyHigher Education Funding Council for EnglandMcDonald Observator
- …