AAVSO Photometric All-Sky Survey (APASS), underway since 2010,
covers the entire sky from 7.5 < V < 16.5 magnitude, and in the BVugrizY
bandpasses. A northern and a southern site are used, each with twin ASA
20cm astrographs and Apogee Aspen CG16m cameras, covering 2.9x2.9 square
degrees with 2.6arcsec pixels. Landolt and SDSS standards are used for
all-sky solutions, with typical 0.02mag calibration errors on the bright
end.
Data Release 10 is a complete reprocessing of all 500K images taken with
the system, including hundreds of nights not part of DR9. Sextractor is
used for star finding and centroiding; DAOPHOT is used for aperture
photometry; the astrometry.net plate-solving library is used for basic
astrometry, supplanted with more precise WCS that utilizes knowledge of the
optical train distortions. With these changes, DR10 includes many more
stars than prior releases.
More information is available at http://www.aavso.org/apass.
A Catalog of Galaxies in the Direction of the Perseus Cluster
Short Name:
pcc cone
Date:
23 Mar 2022 13:13:05
Publisher:
The GAVO DC team
Description:
This is a catalog of 5437 morphologically classified sources in the
direction of the Perseus galaxy cluster core, among them 496
early-type low-mass galaxy candidates. The catalog is primarily based
on V-band imaging data acquired with the William Herschel Telescope.
Additionally, we used archival Subaru multiband imaging data in order
to measure aperture colors and to perform a morphological
classification. The catalog reaches its 50 per cent completeness limit
at an absolute V-band luminosity of -12 mag and a V-band surface
brightness of 26 mag arcsec^-2 .
In addition to the published table, this service also contains cutout
images of the objects investigated.
A all-sky compilation of galactic stellar sources observed for OH
maser emission in the transitions at 1612, 1665, and 1667 MHz. The
database contains OH maser observations selected from the literature .
These observations belong to more than 6000 different objects. The
database consists of three tables: The main table ("masers"),
interferometric followup observations ("maps") and monitoring programs
("monitor").
A Database of Circumstellar OH Masers: Interferometric Followups
Short Name:
engels oh maps
Date:
23 Mar 2022 13:13:07
Publisher:
The GAVO DC team
Description:
A all-sky compilation of galactic stellar sources observed for OH
maser emission in the transitions at 1612, 1665, and 1667 MHz. The
database contains OH maser observations selected from the literature .
These observations belong to more than 6000 different objects. The
database consists of three tables: The main table ("masers"),
interferometric followup observations ("maps") and monitoring programs
("monitor").
A Database of Circumstellar OH Masers: Monitoring Programs
Short Name:
engels oh mon
Date:
23 Mar 2022 13:13:07
Publisher:
The GAVO DC team
Description:
A all-sky compilation of galactic stellar sources observed for OH
maser emission in the transitions at 1612, 1665, and 1667 MHz. The
database contains OH maser observations selected from the literature .
These observations belong to more than 6000 different objects. The
database consists of three tables: The main table ("masers"),
interferometric followup observations ("maps") and monitoring programs
("monitor").
2007-2017 ANTARES search for cosmic neutrino point sources
Short Name:
ANTARES2017
Date:
09 Feb 2023 20:42:02
Publisher:
KM3NeT
Description:
The ANTARES neutrino telescope aims for the identification of
neutrinos from cosmic accelerators. The good visibility towards the
Southern sky for neutrino energies below 100 TeV and the good angular
resolution for reconstructed events make the telescope excellent to
test for the presence of point-like sources, especially of Galactic
origin. The data set corresponds to the track sample (muon neutrino
candidates) of a study meant to search for a point sources with data
collected from January 2007 to December 2017 by the ANTARES neutrino
telescope.
2007-2010 ANTARES search for cosmic neutrino point sources
Short Name:
antares10 cone
Date:
23 Mar 2022 13:13:09
Publisher:
The GAVO DC team
Description:
A time integrated search for point sources of cosmic neutrinos was
performed using the data collected from January 2007 to November 2010
by the ANTARES neutrino telescope. This dataset includes a total of
3058 events obtained during the effective livetime of 813 days.
This is legacy data. The most recently released data can be found at
ivo://org.gavo.dc/antares/q/cone.
2007-2012 ANTARES search for cosmic neutrino point sources
Short Name:
antares cone
Date:
23 Mar 2022 13:13:16
Publisher:
The GAVO DC team
Description:
A time integrated search for point sources of cosmic neutrinos was
performed using the data collected from January 2007 to November 2012
by the ANTARES neutrino telescope. This dataset includes a total of
5921 events obtained during the effective livetime of 1338 days.
This service provides a cone search on the table of FRB detection,
and returns links to the FRB properties as well as one to the PSRFITS
files with the data.
This service provies a cone search on the table containing metadata
from the data obtained throughout all observations performed for the
survey. If an FRB was detected, a link to the FRB properties as well
as one to the PSRFITS data are provided. If no FRB was deteced in the
data, a link is provided to a service that lists all information
needed to request the raw data to be staged from tape to disk, as well
as documentation on the procedure to perform this request. Please note
that requests for raw data are handled on base of best effort.
ARI's "Geschichte des Fixsternhimmels" is an attempt to collect all
astrometrically useful observations from before ca. 1970 in a way
comparable to what has been done to construct the FK* series of
fundamental catalogs. About 7e6 published positions are included.
In GAVO's DC, we provide tables of identified and non-identified stars
together with the master catalog that objects were identified against.
The catalogue ARIHIP has been constructed by selecting the 'best
data' for a given star from combinations of HIPPARCOS data with Boss'
GC and/or the Tycho-2 catalogue as well as the FK6. It provides 'best
data' for 90 842 stars with a typical mean error of 0.89 mas/year
(about a factor of 1.3 better than Hipparcos for this sample of
stars).
Astrometric Microlensing Events Predicted from Gaia DR2
Short Name:
am lensing 2
Date:
23 Mar 2022 13:13:04
Publisher:
The GAVO DC team
Description:
From the Gaia DR2 catalogue we predict astrometric microlensing
events by foreground stars with high proper motion (µ_tot >150mas/yr)
passing a background source in the next decades. Using Gaia DR2
photometry we determine an approximate mass of the lens, which we use
to calculate the expected microlensing effects. This yields 3914
microlensing events by 2875 different lenses between 2010 and 2065
with expected shifts larger than 0.1 mas between the lensed and
unlensed positions of the source. 513 of those are expected to happen
between 2014.5 - 2026.5 and might be measured by Gaia. For 127 events
we also expect a magnification between 1 mmag and 3 mag.
Astrometric Microlensing Events Predicted from Gaia eDR3
Short Name:
am lensing 2
Date:
23 Mar 2022 13:13:11
Publisher:
The GAVO DC team
Description:
From the Gaia eDR3 catalogue we predict astrometric microlensing
events by foreground stars with high proper motion (μ > 100 mas/yr)
passing a background source in the next decades. Using Gaia DR3
photometry we determine an approximate mass of the lens, which we use
to calculate the expected microlensing effects. This yields 4842
microlensing events by 3791 different lenses between 2010 and 2066
with expected shifts larger than 0.1 mas between the lensed and
unlensed positions of the source. The past events might be interested
when analyzing the individual Gaia measurements). 685 of those are
expected to happen within the next decade (2021-2031). For 140 events
we also expect a magnification between 1 mmag and 0.6 mag.
Extracted sources from the Bochum Galactic Disk Survey. We provide
mean photometry in U, B, V, z, r, and i bands. Note that sources in
different bands are not matched. Also, sources sitting in the regions
imaged in multiple fields have not been matched even within one band.
In i and r, BGDS light curves are available. See related services for
details.
This catalog presents the 1-100 GeV spectral energy distribution
(SED) for a population of 148 high-synchrotron-peaked blazars (HSPs)
recently detected with Fermi-LAT as part of the First Brazil-ICRANet
Gamma-ray Blazar catalogue (1BIGB). A series of two works describe
details on the broadband analysis https://arxiv.org/abs/1609.08501
(paper 1), and the calculation of the gamma-ray SEDs
https://arxiv.org/abs/1804.08801 (paper 2). Most of the 1BIGB sources
do not appear in previous Fermi-LAT catalogues and their gamma-ray
spectral properties are presented here for the first time,
representing a significant new extension of the gamma-ray blazar
population. Since the 1BIGB sample was originally selected from an
excess signal in the 0.3-500 GeV band, the sources stand out as
promising TeV blazar candidates, potentially in reach of the
forthcoming very-high-energy (VHE) gamma-ray observatory, CTA. The
flux estimates presented here are derived considering PASS8 data,
integrating over more than 9 years of Fermi-LAT observations. The full
broadband fit between 0.3-500 GeV presented in paper 1 for all sources
was reevaluated in paper 2, updating the power-law parameters with
currently available Fermi-LAT dataset. The importance of these sources
in the context of VHE population studies with both current instruments
and the future CTA is evaluated in paper 2. To do so, a subsample of
1BIGB sources was selected and had their gamma-ray SEDs extrapolated
to the highest energies, properly accounting for absorption due to the
extragalactic background light. Those extrapolations were compared to
the published CTA sensitivity curves and their detectability by CTA
was estimated. Two notable sources from our sample, namely 1BIGB
J224910.6-130002 and 1BIGB J194356.2+211821, are discussed in greater
detail in paper 2. All gamma-ray SEDs, which are shown here for the
first time, are made publicly available via the Brazilian Science Data
Center (BSDC) service, maintained at CBPF, in Rio de Janeiro.
Estimated distances to 1.33 billion stars in Gaia DR2
Short Name:
gdr2dist scs
Date:
04 Apr 2022 15:48:41
Publisher:
The GAVO DC team
Description:
This catalogue provides distances estimates (and uncertainties therein)
for 1.33 billion stars over the whole sky brighter than about G=20.7.
These have been estimated using the parallaxes (and their uncertainties)
from Gaia DR2. A Bayesian procedure was used involving a prior
with a single parameter L(l,b), which varies smoothly with Galactic
longitude and latitude according to a Galaxy model. The posterior is
summarized with a point estimate (usually the mode) and a confidence
interval (usually the 68% highest density interval). The estimation
procedure is described in detail in the `accompanying paper`_,
which also analyses the catalogue content.
.. _accompanying paper: http://www.mpia.de/homes/calj/gdr2_distances.html
This schema contains data re-published from the official
Gaia mirrors (such as ivo://uni-heidelberg.de/gaia/tap) either to
support combining its data with local tables (the various Xlite tables)
or to make the data more accessible to VO clients (e.g., epoch fluxes).
Other Gaia-related data is found in, among others, the gdr2dist, gdr3mock,
gdr3spec, gedr3auto, gedr3dist, gedr3mock, and gedr3spur schemas.
This schema contains data re-published from the official
Gaia mirrors (such as ivo://uni-heidelberg.de/gaia/tap) either to
support combining its data with local tables (the various Xlite tables)
or to make the data more accessible to VO clients (e.g., epoch fluxes).
This schema contains data re-published from the official
Gaia mirrors (such as ivo://uni-heidelberg.de/gaia/tap) either to
support combining its data with local tables (the various Xlite tables)
or to make the data more accessible to VO clients (e.g., epoch fluxes).
Other Gaia-related data is found in, among others, the gdr3mock,
gdr3spec, gedr3auto, gedr3dist, gedr3mock, and gedr3spur schemas.
This service returns the most important Gaia DR3 gaia_source columns
together with robust geometric and photogeometric distances for the
~1.47 billion objects in Bailer-Jones et al's distance catalogue.
Gravitational arc candidates in the CFHTLS-Archive-Research Survey
CARS
Short Name:
carsarcs scs
Date:
23 Mar 2022 13:13:06
Publisher:
The GAVO DC team
Description:
Candidate gravitational arcs in the 37 deg^2 of
CFHTLS-Archive-Research Survey (CARS). The data include their
post-stamp images, astrometry, photometry (u*,g',r',i'), geometric
properties (length, length-to-width ratio, profile curvature, area),
and photometric redshifts. The arc candidates were selected booth with
an automatic arcfinder, based on a tailored image segmentation and a
color selection, and by visually inspecting the survey.
High-Resolution Very Large Array Imaging of Sloan Digital Sky Survey
Stripe 82 at 1.4 GHz
Short Name:
vlastripe82 cone
Date:
23 Mar 2022 13:13:06
Publisher:
The GAVO DC team
Description:
This is a high-resolution radio survey of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
(SDSS) Southern Equatorial Stripe, a.k.a. Stripe 82. This 1.4 GHz survey
was conducted with the Very Large Array (VLA) primarily in the
A-configuration, with supplemental B-configuration data to increase
sensitivity to extended structure. The survey has an angular resolution
of 1.''8 and achieves a median rms noise of 52 μJy per beam over 92 deg^2.
The catalog contains 17,969 isolated radio components, for an overall
source density of ∼195 sources/deg^2. See also J.A. Hodge et al,
:bibcode:`2011AJ....142....3H` .
The LIFE Target Star Database contains information useful
for the planned `LIFE mission`_ (mid-ir, nulling
interferometer in space). It characterizes possible
target systems including information about stellar,
planetary and disk properties. The data itself is mainly
a collection from different other catalogs.
Note that LIFE's target database is living
data. The content – and to some extent even structure – of these
tables may change at any time without prior warning.
.. _LIFE mission: https://life-space-mission.com/
This service queries the catalog of radio sources from the LOFAR
Two-metre Sky Survey First Data Release (LoTSS-DR1) that have been
cross-matched with an optical or infrared counterpart. This data
release contains images and catalogs that characterise the
low-frequency radio emission in the region of the HETDEX Spring Field
(right ascension 10h45m00s to15h30m00s and declination 45◦00′00′′ to
57◦00′00′′). A total of 325,694 radio sources are detected in a region
covering 424 square degrees. The maps have a median sensitivity of 71
uJy/beam and a resolution of 6 arcsec. Optical counterparts for 71% of
the radio sources have been identified and where possible photometric
redshifts for these sources have been derived.
In this data release from the ongoing LOw-Frequency ARray (LOFAR)
Two-metre Sky Survey (LoTSS) we present 120-168 MHz images covering
27% of the northern sky. Our coverage is split into two regions
centred at approximately 12h45m +44°30′ and 1h00m +28°00′ and spanning
4178 and 1457 square degrees respectively. The images were derived
from 3,451 hrs (7.6 PB) of LOFAR High Band Antenna data which were
corrected for the direction-independent instrumental properties as
well as direction-dependent ionospheric distortions during extensive,
but fully automated, data processing. A catalogue of 4,395,448 radio
sources is derived from our total intensity (Stokes I) maps, where the
majority of these have never been detected at radio wavelengths
before. At 6′′ resolution, our full bandwidth Stokes I continuum maps
with a central frequency of 144 MHz have: a median rms sensitivity of
83 μ Jy/beam; a flux density scale accuracy of approximately 10%; an
astrometric accuracy of 0.2′′; and we estimate the point-source
completeness to be 90% at a peak brightness of 0.8 mJy/beam. By
creating three 16 MHz bandwidth images across the band we are able to
measure the in-band spectral index of many sources, albeit the error
on the derived spectral index is > ±0.2 which is a consequence of our
flux-density scale accuracy and small fractional bandwidth. Our
circular polarisation (Stokes V) 20′′ resolution 120-168 MHz continuum
images have a median rms sensitivity of 95 μ Jy/beam, and we estimate
a Stokes I to Stokes V leakage of 0.056%. Our linear polarisation
(Stokes Q and Stokes U) image cubes consist of 480 97.6 kHz wide
planes and have a median rms sensitivity per plane of 10.8mJy/beam at
4′ and 2.2mJy/beam at 20′′; we estimate the Stokes I to Stokes Q/U
leakage to be approximately 0.2%. Here we characterise and publicly
release our Stokes I, Q, U and V images in addition to the calibrated
uv-data to facilitate the thorough scientific exploitation of this
unique dataset. This service queries the Stokes I continuum mosaic
gaussian component catalogue.
This service queries the catalog of radio sources from the LOFAR
Two-metre Sky Survey First Data Release (LoTSS-DR1). This data release
contains images and catalogs that characterise the low-frequency radio
emission in the region of the HETDEX Spring Field (right ascension
10h45m00s to15h30m00s and declination 45◦00′00′′ to 57◦00′00′′). A
total of 325,694 radio sources are detected in a region covering 424
square degrees. The maps have a median sensitivity of 71 uJy/beam and
a resolution of 6 arcsec. Optical counterparts for 71% of the radio
sources have been identified and where possible photometric redshifts
for these sources have been derived.
The LOFAR Two Meter Sky Survey LoTSS DR2
(:bibcode:`2022A&A...659A...1S`) obtained radio data from 27% of the
northern sky between 120 and 168 MHz in the year 2014 through 2020. This
service publishes polarization spectra of extragalactic radio sources
(radio galaxies and blazars) and the rotation measures derived from them.
We also give redshifts for all sources. The data has a spatial resolution
of 20 arcsec.
In this data release from the ongoing LOw-Frequency ARray (LOFAR)
Two-metre Sky Survey (LoTSS) we present 120-168 MHz images covering
27% of the northern sky. Our coverage is split into two regions
centred at approximately 12h45m +44°30′ and 1h00m +28°00′ and spanning
4178 and 1457 square degrees respectively. The images were derived
from 3,451 hrs (7.6 PB) of LOFAR High Band Antenna data which were
corrected for the direction-independent instrumental properties as
well as direction-dependent ionospheric distortions during extensive,
but fully automated, data processing. A catalogue of 4,395,448 radio
sources is derived from our total intensity (Stokes I) maps, where the
majority of these have never been detected at radio wavelengths
before. At 6′′ resolution, our full bandwidth Stokes I continuum maps
with a central frequency of 144 MHz have: a median rms sensitivity of
83 μ Jy/beam; a flux density scale accuracy of approximately 10%; an
astrometric accuracy of 0.2′′; and we estimate the point-source
completeness to be 90% at a peak brightness of 0.8 mJy/beam. By
creating three 16 MHz bandwidth images across the band we are able to
measure the in-band spectral index of many sources, albeit the error
on the derived spectral index is > ±0.2 which is a consequence of our
flux-density scale accuracy and small fractional bandwidth. Our
circular polarisation (Stokes V) 20′′ resolution 120-168 MHz continuum
images have a median rms sensitivity of 95 μ Jy/beam, and we estimate
a Stokes I to Stokes V leakage of 0.056%. Our linear polarisation
(Stokes Q and Stokes U) image cubes consist of 480 97.6 kHz wide
planes and have a median rms sensitivity per plane of 10.8mJy/beam at
4′ and 2.2mJy/beam at 20′′; we estimate the Stokes I to Stokes Q/U
leakage to be approximately 0.2%. Here we characterise and publicly
release our Stokes I, Q, U and V images in addition to the calibrated
uv-data to facilitate the thorough scientific exploitation of this
unique dataset. This service queries the Stokes I continuum mosaic
source catalogue.
A catalogue of E(V-I) extinction values is presented for 3174 (LMC)
and 693 (SMC) fields within the Magellanic Clouds. The extinction
values were computed by determining the (V-I) colour difference of the
red clump from Optical Gravitational Microlensing Experiment (OGLE
III) observations in the V and I bands and theoretical values for
unreddend red clump colours.
The 2MASS Point Source Catalogue, short a couple of exotic fields. We
provide this data mainly for matching with other catalogs within our
TAP service.
This service queries the unified source catalogue of radio sources
from the Multifrequency Snapshot Sky Survey (MSSS) Verification Field.
This survey is the first major observing program to be carried out
with LOFAR during its ongoing commissioning phase. This service
queries the unified source catalogue database for the MSSS survey. The
Verification Field is a region of 100 square degrees centered at
(15h,69◦).
MWSC presents a list of 3006 Milky Way Stellar Clusters (MWSC), found
in the 2MAst (2MASS with Astrometry) catalogue. The target list was
compiled on the basis of present-day lists of open, globular and
candidate clusters. For confirmed clusters we determined a homogeneous
set of astrophysical parameters such as membership, angular radii of
the main morphological parts, mean cluster proper motions, distances,
reddenings, ages, tidal parameters, and sometimes radial velocities.
MWSC-e14a ("MWSC extension 2014a") is a catalogue of
139 new open clusters at high Galactic latitudes
(\|b\|>20 deg) including lists of candidate members. It extends the
Kharchenko et al. 'Catalog of Milky Way Star Clusters'.
The target list was compiled as density enhancements found in the 2MASS
point source catalogue. For confirmed clusters we determined a homogeneous
set of astrophysical parameters such as membership, angular radii of the
main morphological parts, proper motion, distance, reddening, age, and
tidal parameters.
.. _Catalog of Milky Way Star Clusters: http://dc.g-vo.org/mwsc/q/clu/form
MWSC presents a list of 3006 Milky Way Stellar Clusters (MWSC), found
in the 2MAst (2MASS with Astrometry) catalogue. The target list was
compiled on the basis of present-day lists of open, globular and
candidate clusters. For confirmed clusters we determined a homogeneous
set of astrophysical parameters such as membership, angular radii of
the main morphological parts, mean cluster proper motions, distances,
reddenings, ages, tidal parameters, and sometimes radial velocities.
OpenNGC is a database containing positions and main data of NGC (New
General Catalogue) and IC (Index Catalogue) objects. It has been built
by merging data from NED, HyperLEDA, SIMBAD, and several databases
available at HEASARC.
In this VO publication, we have changed most of the column names,
mostly to make them work as ADQL column names without resorting to
delimited identifiers. The mapping should be obvious.
An optical polarimetric catalog for the Small Magelanic Cloud (SMC)
is presented. It gives intrinsic and observed polarizations in the
V-band for a total of 7207 stars located in the Northeast and Wing
sections of the SMC and part of the Magellanic Bridge.
Parameters of 220 million stars from Gaia BP/RP (XP) spectra
Short Name:
XP ap-pars
Date:
19 Jun 2023 07:31:09
Publisher:
The GAVO DC team
Description:
We present astrophysical parameters of 220 million stars, based on
Gaia XP spectra and near-infrared photometry from 2MASS and WISE.
Instead of using ab initio stellar models, we develop a data-driven
model of Gaia XP spectra as a function of the stellar parameters, with
a few straightforward built-in physical assumptions. This resource is
a VO re-publication of the resulting catalog of stellar parameters.
For bulk downloads, the covariances, the trained model, and more, see
https://zenodo.org/record/7811871.
This is a catalogue of photometric redshifts of galaxies in the
Stripe 82 obtained when morphology (galaxy size, ellipticity, Sérsic
index, and surface brightness) are included in training on galaxy
samples from the SDSS and the CFHT Stripe-82 Survey (CS82). Our
redshifts yield a 68th percentile error of 0.058(1 + z), and a outlier
fraction of 5.2 per cent.
This dataset comprises the public data observed by the Pierre Auger
cosmic ray observatory, which is 1% of its total data. It contains
28493 events between 0.1 and 49.7 EeV collected between 2004 and 2013.
PPMXL is a catalog of positions, proper motions, 2MASS- and optical
photometry of 900 million stars and galaxies, aiming to be complete
down to about V=20 full-sky. It is the result of a re-reduction of
USNO-B1 together with 2MASS to the ICRS as represented by PPMX.
PPM-Extended (PPMX) is a catalogue of 18 088 919 stars on the ICRS
system containing astrometric and photometric information. Its
limiting magnitude is about 15.2 in the GSC photometric system.
The RAdial Velocity Experiment (RAVE) contains stellar atmospheric
parameters (effective temperature, surface gravity, overall
metallicity), radial velocities, chemical abundances and distances.
Observations between 2003 and 2013 were used to build the five RAVE
data releases.
GAVO at Leibniz-Institute for Astrophysics Potsdam
Description:
This service gives access to the 4th data release of RAVE (RAdial
Velocity Experiment). It contains radial velocities of stars, stellar
atmospheric parameters, some abundances and distances.
Reference HII Regions for Abundance Determination (SCS)
Short Name:
HII props scs
Date:
23 Mar 2022 13:13:03
Publisher:
The GAVO DC team
Description:
A table containing reference data for HII regions. We also give a
source code to compute abundances and electron temperatures in HII
regions from strong emission lines.
Sasmirala Subarcsecond mid-infrared atlas of local AGN, Cone Search
Short Name:
sasmirala cone
Date:
23 Mar 2022 13:13:11
Publisher:
The GAVO DC team
Description:
The Subarcsecond mid-infrared (MIR) atlas of local active galactic
nuclei (AGN) is a collection of all available N- and Q-band images
obtained at ground-based 8-meter class telescopes with public archives
(Gemini/Michelle, Gemini/T-ReCS, Subaru/COMICS, and VLT/VISIR). It
includes in total 895 images, of which 60% are perviously unpublished.
These correspond to 253 local AGN with a median redshift of 0.016. The
atlas contains the uniformly processed and calibrated images and
nuclear photometry obtained through Gauss and PSF fitting for all
objects and filters. This also includes measurements of the nuclear
extensions. In addition, the classifications of extended emission (if
present) and derived nuclear monochromatic 12 and 18 micron continuum
fluxes are available. Finally, flux ratios with the circumnuclear MIR
emission (measured by Spitzer) and total MIR emission of the galaxy
(measured by IRAS) are presented.
This is a redacted version of the SDSS DR16 table prepared for VizieR
(V/154/sdss16). It is mainly here to facilitate local matches; for
original SDSS-related research, it is probably better to somewhere
else.
Over VizieR and SDSS, we are keeping most of the per-band values in
arrays to keep the column list manageable. Note that in ADQL, array
indexes are 1-based.
We are trying to orient our column names on SDSS but use underscores
instead of camel-casing (e.g. spec_obj_id instead of SpecObjID), since
mixed-case identifiers in SQL is asking for trouble.
To save space, we do not keep psf-based classifications, per-band
offsets, spectrum metadata, and USNO-related information in this
table. Let the operators know if you need any of that.
The catalogue WDSLOAN10 has been constructed by spectroscopically
selecting white dwarfs and subdwarfs in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
Data Release 10. It offers Teff, log(g) and mass for hydrogen
atmosphere white dwarf stars (DAs) and helium atmosphere white dwarf
stars (DBs), and estimatives of calcium/helium abundances for the
white dwarf stars with metallic lines (DZs) and carbon/helium for
carbon dominated spectra DQs.
The resource contains the recommendations and requirements for ALMA
FITS products of the Inter-ARC ALMA Science Archive Working Group
(ASAWG) with the view to including a metadataset that is complete and
easily accessible by the ChiVO Data Provider (CDP).
SMAKCED Census of Structure in Early-type Dwarf Galaxies
Short Name:
smakced census
Date:
23 Mar 2022 13:13:18
Publisher:
The GAVO DC team
Description:
The Stellar content, MAss and Kinematics of Cluster Early-type Dwarf
galaxies (SMAKCED_) project is a survey of 121 Virgo cluster early type
galaxies. This service publishes deep near-infrared (H band) images
obtained by SMAKCED together with `resulting decompositions`_ and other
properties of the galaxies in the sample.
.. _SMAKCED: http://smakced.net
.. _resulting decompositions: http://smakced.net/data.html
Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory Telescope Data Center
Description:
This catalog contains derived information and access to spectra for a
catalog of objects in the field of M31, drawn from the study of star
clusters, HII regions, PNe and individual stars in M31 done with
Hectospec on the MMT by Nelson Caldwell and a host of others.
Stripe 82 Photometric Redshifts from SDSS Coadditions
Short Name:
s82 coadd cone
Date:
23 Mar 2022 13:13:08
Publisher:
The GAVO DC team
Description:
This survey gives photometric redshifts of objects within 275 deg²
(−50◦ < α < 60◦ and −1.◦25 < δ < +1.◦25) centered on the Celestial
Equator. Each piece of sky has ∼20 runs of repeated scanning by the
SDSS camera contributing and thus reaches ∼2 mag fainter than the SDSS
single pass data, i.e., to r ∼ 23.5 for galaxies.
The SuperCOSMOS data primarily originate from scans of the UK Schmidt
and Palomar POSS II blue, red and near-IR sky surveys. The ESO Schmidt
R (dec < -17.5) and Palomar POSS-I E (dec > -17.5) surveys have also
been scanned and provide an early (1st) epoch red measurement.
Mirrored here is the source table containing four-plate multi-colour,
multi-epoch data which are merged into a single source catalogue for
general science exploitation. Within the GAVO DC, some column names
have been adapted to local customs (primarily positions, proper
motions).
The Fifth Catalogue of Nearby Stars (CNS5) aims to provide the most
volume-complete sample of stars in the solar neighbourhood. The CNS5
is compiled based on trigonometric parallaxes from Gaia EDR3 and
Hipparcos, and supplemented with astrometric data from Spitzer and
ground-based surveys carried out in the infrared. The CNS5 catalogue
is statistically complete down to 19.7 mag in G-band and 11.8 mag in
W1-band absolute magnitudes, corresponding to a spectral type of L8.
Continuous updates of observational data for nearby stars from all
sources were collected and evaluated. For all known stars in the 25 pc
sphere around the Sun, the best values of positions in space,
velocities, and magnitudes in different filters are presented.
The fifth U.S. Naval Observatory CCD Astrograph Catalog (UCAC5)
Short Name:
UCAC 5
Date:
23 Mar 2022 13:13:08
Publisher:
The GAVO DC team
Description:
New astrometric reductions of the US Naval Observatory CCD Astrograph
Catalog (UCAC) all-sky observations were performed from first
principles using the TGAS stars in the 8 to 11 magnitude range as
reference star catalog. Significant improvements in the astrometric
solutions were obtained and the UCAC5 catalog of mean positions at a
mean epoch near 2001 was generated. By combining UCAC5 with Gaia DR1
data new proper motions on the Gaia coordinate system for over 107
million stars were obtained with typical accuracies of 1 to 2 mas/yr
(R = 11 to 15 mag), and about 5 mas/yr at 16th mag. Proper motions of
most TGAS stars are improved over their Gaia data and the precision
level of TGAS proper motions is extended to many millions more,
fainter stars.
The database table uses actual NULLs for missing photometry, and all
angular coordinates have been homogenised to degrees.
The fourth U.S. Naval Observatory CCD Astrograph Catalog (UCAC4)
Short Name:
ucac4 scs
Date:
23 Mar 2022 13:13:16
Publisher:
The GAVO DC team
Description:
UCAC4 is a compiled, all-sky star catalog covering mainly the 8 to 16
magnitude range in a single bandpass between V and R.
Positional errors are about 15 to 20 mas for stars in the 10 to 14 mag
range. Proper motions have been derived for most of the about 113
million stars utilizing about 140 other star catalogs with significant
epoch difference to the UCAC CCD observations. These data are
supplemented by 2MASS photometric data for about 110 million stars and
5-band (B,V,g,r,i) photometry from the APASS (AAVSO Photometric
All-Sky Survey) for over 50 million stars. UCAC4 also contains error
estimates and various flags. All bright stars not observed with
the astrograph have been added to UCAC4 from a set of Hipparcos and
Tycho-2 stars. Thus UCAC4 should be complete from the brightest stars
to about R=16, with the source of data indicated in flags.
This is a clean and well characterised catalogue of objects within 100pc of
the Sun from the Gaia early third data release. We characterise the
catalogue using the full data release, and comparisons to other catalogues
in literature and simulations. For all candidates (measured parallax <
8 mas), we calculate a distance probability function using Bayesian
procedures and mock catalogues for the prediction of the priors. For each
entry using a random forest classifier we attempt to remove sources with
spurious astrometric solutions.
This results in 331312 objects that should contain at least 92% of stars
within 100 pc at spectral type M9.
GCNS comes with several auxiliary tables, in particular lists of
resolved stellar systems, of known neary stars not found in eDR3 and
of candidates of Hyades and ComaBer cluster members.