593 research outputs found

    New colour-transformations for the Sloan photometry and revised metallicity calibration and equations for photometric parallax estimation

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    We evaluated new colour-transformations for the Sloan photometry by 224 standards and used them to revise both the equations for photometric parallax estimation and metallicity calibration cited by Karaali et al. (2003). This process improves the metallicity and absolute magnitude estimations by [Fe/H]<=0.3 dex and M^{H}_{g} <= 0.1 mag respectively. There is a high correlation for metallicities and absolute magnitudes derived for two systems, UBV and Sloan, by means of the revised calibrations.Comment: 11 pages, including 7 figures and 2 tables, accepted for publication in PAS

    SDSS Absolute Magnitudes for Thin Disc Stars based on Trigonometric Parallaxes

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    We present a new luminosity-colour relation based on trigonometric parallaxes for thin disc main-sequence stars in SDSS photometry. We matched stars from the newly reduced Hipparcos catalogue with the ones taken from 2MASS All-Sky Catalogue of Point Sources, and applied a series of constraints, i.e. relative parallax errors (σπ/π0.05\sigma_{\pi}/\pi\leq0.05), metallicity (0.30[M/H]0.20-0.30\leq[M/H]\leq0.20 dex), age (0t100\leq t \leq 10 Gyr) and surface gravity (logg>4\log g>4), and obtained a sample of thin disc main-sequence stars. Then, we used our previous transformation equations (Bilir et al. 2008a) between SDSS and 2MASS photometries and calibrated the MgM_{g} absolute magnitudes to the (gr)0(g-r)_{0} and (ri)0(r-i)_0 colours. The transformation formulae between 2MASS and SDSS photometries along with the absolute magnitude calibration provide space densities for bright stars which saturate the SDSS magnitudes.Comment: 7 pages, including 7 figures and 2 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA

    Absolute Magnitude Calibration for Giants based on the Colour-Magnitude Diagrams of Galactic Clusters. II-Calibration with SDSS

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    We present an absolute magnitude calibration for red giants with the colour magnitude diagrams of six Galactic clusters with different metallicities i.e. M92, M13, M3, M71, NGC 6791 and NGC 2158. The combination of the absolute magnitudes of the red giant sequences with the corresponding metallicities provides calibration for absolute magnitude estimation for red giants for a given (gr)0(g-r)_{0} colour. The calibration is defined in the colour interval 0.45 (gr)0\leq(g-r)_{0}\leq 1.30 mag and it covers the metallicity interval 2.15[Fe/H]-2.15\leq \lbrack Fe/H \rbrack \leq +0.37 dex. The absolute magnitude residuals obtained by the application of the procedure to another set of Galactic clusters lie in the interval 0.28<ΔM+0.43-0.28< \Delta M \leq +0.43 mag. However, the range of 94% of the residuals is shorter, 0.1<ΔM+0.4-0.1<\Delta M \leq+0.4 mag. The mean and the standard deviation of (all) residuals are 0.169 and 0.140 mag, respectively. The derived relations are applicable to stars older than 2 Gyr, the age of the youngest calibrating cluster.Comment: 12 pages, including 5 figures and 10 tables, accepted for publication in PASA. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1204.429

    Spatial distribution and galactic model parameters of cataclysmic variables

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    The spatial distribution, galactic model parameters and luminosity function of cataclysmic variables (CVs) in the solar neighbourhood have been determined from a carefully established sample of 459 CVs. The sample contains all of the CVs with distances computed from the Period-Luminosity-Colours (PLCs) relation of CVs which has been recently derived and calibrated with {\em 2MASS} photometric data. It has been found that an exponential function fits best to the observational z-distributions of all of the CVs in the sample, non-magnetic CVs and dwarf novae, while the sech^{2} function is more appropriate for nova-like stars and polars. The vertical scaleheight of CVs is 158±\pm14 pc for the {\em 2MASS} J-band limiting apparent magnitude of 15.8. On the other hand, the vertical scaleheights are 128±\pm20 and 160±\pm5 pc for dwarf novae and nova-like stars, respectively. The local space density of CVs is found to be 3×105\sim3\times10^{-5} pc^{-3} which is in agreement with the lower limit of the theoretical predictions. The luminosity function of CVs shows an increasing trend toward higher space densities at low luminosities, implying that the number of short-period systems should be high. The discrepancies between the theoretical and observational population studies of CVs will almost disappear if for the z-dependence of the space density the sech^{2} density function is used.Comment: 29 pages, 9 figures and 5 tables, accepted for publication in New Astronom

    Luminosity-Colours relations for thin disc main-sequence stars

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    In this study we present the absolute magnitude calibrations of thin disc main-sequence stars in the optical (MVM_{V}), and in the near-infrared (MJM_{J}). Thin disc stars are identified by means of Padova isochrones, and absolute magnitudes for the sample are evaluated via the newly reduced Hipparcos data. The obtained calibrations cover a large range of spectral types: from A0 to M4 in the optical and from A0 to M0 in the near-infrared. Also, we discuss the of effects binary stars and evolved stars on the absolute magnitude calibrations. The usage of these calibrations can be extended to the estimation of galactic model parameters for the thin disc individually, in order to compare these parameters with the corresponding ones estimated by χ2min\chi{^2}_{min} statistics (which provides galactic model parameters for thin and thick discs, and halo simultaneously) to test any degeneracy between them. The calibrations can also be used in other astrophysical researches where distance plays an important role in that study.Comment: 8 pages, including 12 figures and 4 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA

    Galactic longitude dependent Galactic model parameters

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    We present the Galactic model parameters for thin disc estimated by Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) data of 14 940 stars with apparent magnitudes 16<go2116<g_{o}\leq21 in six intermediate latitude fields in the first Galactic quadrant. Star/galaxy separation was performed by using the SDSSSDSS photometric pipeline and the isodensity contours in the (gr)0(ri)0(g-r)_{0}-(r-i)_{0} two colour diagram. The separation of thin disc stars is carried out by the bimodal distribution of stars in the (gr)o(g-r)_{o} histogram, and the absolute magnitudes were evaluated by a procedure presented in the literature Bilir et al. (2005). Exponential density law fits better to the derived density functions for the absolute magnitude intervals 8<M(g)98<M(g)\leq9 and 11<M(g)1211<M(g)\leq12, whereas sech/sech2^{2} laws are more appropriate for absolute magnitude intervals 9<M(g)109<M(g)\leq10 and 10<M(g)1110<M(g)\leq11. We showed that the scaleheight and scalelength are Galactic longitude dependent. The average values and ranges of the scaleheight and the scalelength are =220=220 pc (196H234196\leq H \leq 234 pc) and =1900=1900 pc (1561h22801561\leq h \leq 2280 pc) respectively. This result would be useful to explain different numerical values claimed for those parameters obtained by different authors for the fields in different directions of the Galaxy.Comment: 28 pages, including 12 figures and 7 tables, accepted for publication in New Astronom
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