Catalog Service: RR Lyrae GCVS and TYC2 identifiers
Description
The Tycho-2 catalogue (<I/259>) provides astrometric and photometric data for the 2.5 million brightest stars in the sky. Therefore it can provide much larger samples than the Hipparcos samples used to date in statistical studies. The object of this paper is the cross-identification of Tycho-2 sources and known variable stars of RR Lyrae type. The Tycho-2 data of cross-identified sources are added into the ASTRID specialized database. The present selection almost doubles the size of the sample of RR Lyrae stars with available proper motions.
This section describes who is responsible for this resource
Publisher: CDSivo://CDS[Pub. ID]
Contact Information:
This section provides some status information: the resource version, availability, and relevant dates.
This resource was registered on: 2005 Mar 05 15:37:23ZThis resource description was last updated on: 2021 Oct 21 00:00:00Z
This section describes what the resource is, what it contains, and how it might be relevant.
Related Resources:
This section describes the data's coverage over the sky, frequency, and time.
Wavebands covered:
This section describes the rights and usage information for this data.
This is service that does not comply with any IVOA standard but instead provides access to special capabilities specific to this resource.
This is a standard IVOA service that takes as input an ADQL or PQL query and returns tabular data.
This is a standard IVOA service that takes as input a position in the sky and a radius and returns catalog records with positions within that radius.
Cone search capability for table J/A+A/390/173/table4 (GCVS and TYC2 identifiers of the 172 RR Lyrae non-Hipparcos stars identified with a TYC2 source)
VERB=1
VERB=3
Developed with the support of the National Science Foundation under Cooperative Agreement AST0122449 with the Johns Hopkins University The NAVO project is a member of the International Virtual Observatory Alliance
This NAVO Application is hosted by the Space Telescope Science Institute