We have used the Very Large Array, linked with the Pie Town Very Long
Baseline Array antenna, to determine astrometric positions of 19 radio stars in
the International Celestial Reference Frame (ICRF). The positions of these
stars were directly linked to the positions of distant quasars through phase
referencing observations. The positions of the ICRF quasars are known to 0.25
mas, thus providing an absolute reference at the angular resolution of our
radio observations. Average values for the errors in our derived positions for
all sources were 13 mas and 16 mas in R.A. and declination respectively, with
accuracies approaching 1-2 mas for some of the stars observed. Differences
between the ICRF positions of the 38 quasars, and those measured from our
observations showed no systematic offsets, with mean values of -0.3 mas in R.A.
and -1.0 mas in declination. Standard deviations of the quasar position
differences of 17 mas and 11 mas in R.A. and declination respectively, are
consistent with the mean position errors determined for the stars. Our measured
positions were combined with previous Very Large Array measurements taken from
1978-1995 to determine the proper motions of 15 of the stars in our list. With
mean errors of approximately 1.6 mas/yr, the accuracies of our proper motions
approach those derived from Hipparcos, and for a few of the stars in our
program, are better than the Hipparcos values. Comparing the positions of our
radio stars with the Hipparcos catalog, we find that at the epoch of our
observations, the two frames are aligned to within formal errors of
approximately 3 mas. This result confirms that the Hipparcos frame is inertial
at the expected level.Comment: 20 pages, 9 figures Accepted by the Astronomical Journal, 2003 March
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