- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/AJ/151/85
- Title:
- Companions to APOGEE stars. I.
- Short Name:
- J/AJ/151/85
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- In its three years of operation, the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE-1) observed >14000 stars with enough epochs over a sufficient temporal baseline for the fitting of Keplerian orbits. We present the custom orbit-fitting pipeline used to create this catalog, which includes novel quality metrics that account for the phase and velocity coverage of a fitted Keplerian orbit. With a typical radial velocity precision of ~100-200 m/s, APOGEE can probe systems with small separation companions down to a few Jupiter masses. Here we present initial results from a catalog of 382 of the most compelling stellar and substellar companion candidates detected by APOGEE, which orbit a variety of host stars in diverse Galactic environments. Of these, 376 have no previously known small separation companion. The distribution of companion candidates in this catalog shows evidence for an extremely truncated brown dwarf (BD) desert with a paucity of BD companions only for systems with a<0.1-0.2 AU, with no indication of a desert at larger orbital separation. We propose a few potential explanations of this result, some which invoke this catalog's many small separation companion candidates found orbiting evolved stars. Furthermore, 16 BD and planet candidates have been identified around metal-poor ([Fe/H]<-0.5) stars in this catalog, which may challenge the core accretion model for companions >10 M_Jup_. Finally, we find all types of companions are ubiquitous throughout the Galactic disk with candidate planetary-mass and BD companions to distances of ~6 and ~16 kpc, respectively.
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- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/607/810
- Title:
- Companions to isolated elliptical galaxies
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/607/810
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We investigate the number of physical companion galaxies for a sample of relatively isolated elliptical galaxies. The NASA/IPAC Extragalactic Database (NED) has been used to reinvestigate the incidence of satellite galaxies for a sample of 34 elliptical galaxies, first investigated by Bothun & Sullivan (1977PASP...89....5B) using a visual inspection of Palomar Sky Survey prints out to a projected search radius of 75 kpc. We have repeated their original investigation using data cataloged in NED. Nine of these elliptical galaxies appear to be members of galaxy clusters; the remaining sample of 25 galaxies reveals an average of +1.0+/-0.5 apparent companions per galaxy within a projected search radius of 75 kpc, in excess of two equal-area comparison regions displaced by 150-300 kpc. This is significantly larger than the +0.12+/-0.42 companions/galaxy found by Bothun & Sullivan (1977PASP...89....5B) for the identical sample. Making use of published radial velocities, mostly available since the completion of the Bothun-Sullivan study, identifies the physical companions and gives a somewhat lower estimate of +0.4 companions per elliptical galaxy. This is still 3 times larger than the original statistical study, but given the incomplete and heterogeneous nature of the survey redshifts in NED, it still yields a firm lower limit on the number (and identity) of physical companions. An expansion of the search radius out to 300 kpc, again restricted to sampling only those objects with known redshifts in NED, gives another lower limit of 4.5 physical companions per galaxy. (Excluding five elliptical galaxies in the Fornax Cluster, this average drops to 3.5 companions per elliptical.) These physical companions are individually identified and listed, and the ensemble-averaged radial density distribution of these associated galaxies is presented. For the ensemble, the radial density distribution is found to have a falloff consistent with {rho}{prop.to}R^-0.5^ out to approximately 150 kpc. For non-Fornax Cluster companions the falloff continues out to the 300 kpc limit of the survey. The velocity dispersion of these companions is found to reach a maximum of 350 km/s at around 120 kpc, after which they fall at a rate consistent with Keplerian falloff. This falloff may then indicate the detection of a cut-off in the mass-density distribution in the elliptical galaxies' dark matter halo at ~100 kpc.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/384/145
- Title:
- Compiled catalog of Per OB2 star forming complex
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/384/145
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The Compiled Catalogue (CC) is a photometric and astrometric survey with the center at (RA, DE)_J2000 = (3.86h, 34.6{deg}) and radius of 10 degrees of a nearby region of star formation including the Per OB2 association. The CC is based on recently published astronomical catalogues, e.g. Hipparcos and Tycho-2, and supplemented by relevant astrophysical data from numerous data sources. The CC is complete down to V=11.6mag, in general, and to V=18.5mag in the one square degree field with the IC 348 cluster. The coordinates and proper motions are reduced to the Hipparcos system and the photometry in the Johnson system. Typical accuracies of 1-20mas for coordinates, 1-3mas/yr for proper motions, 0.01-0.05mag for BV magnitudes were achieved for majority of 29452 CC stars (V<12mag). For a large number of stars we also collected parallaxes and spectral classes (about 7000 stars), the R (about 2000 stars), I, J, H, K (about 500 stars) magnitudes, radial velocities (330 stars). Stars in the Compiled Catalogue are sorted in right ascension order.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/384/925
- Title:
- Compiled catalog of stellar data of Miras
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/384/925
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The Compiled Catalogue of Mira variables is a result of a merge of the 4th edition of the General Catalogue of Variable Stars (GCVS-4) <II/214A> and present-day high-precision catalogues of space (Hipparcos-Tycho family: Hipparcos <I/239>, Tycho-1 <I/239>, Tycho-2 <I/259>, ACT RC <I/246>, TRC <I/250>) and ground-based (CMC11 <I/256>, PPM-N <I/146>, PPM-S <I/193>, PPM-add <I/208>, Kharchenko 1992) data. The catalogue contains 1103 Miras. Equatorial coordinates were taken from the source catalogues in accordance with the priority: Hipparcos, Tycho-2, Tycho-1, CMC11, PPM, Kharchenko 1992. The proper motions of 1041 Miras are calculated as mean weighted values of source data reduced to the Hipparcos system. The radial velocities of 786 Miras were taken from nine catalogues and lists of Feast (1963MNRAS.125..367F, 1966MNRAS.132..495F), Smak and Preston (1965ApJ...142..943S), Perry and Bidelman (1965PASP...77..214P), Feast et al. (1972MNRAS.158...23F), Dean (1976AJ.....81..364D), Barnes and Fekel (1977Obs....97....1B), Feast et al. (1980MNRAS.190..227F), Barbier-Brossat and Figon (2000) <III/213>, and are given with respect of the absorption lines. For those radial velocities, which were determined from emission lines the correction has been made along with Ikaunieks (1971) relation: VR(abs) - VR(em) = 0.035 * Period. For 724 Miras both proper motions and radial velocities are available. The stars in the Compiled Catalogue are sorted in the same order as in the General Catalogue of Variable Stars.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/466/2614
- Title:
- Complex cluster Abell 1758 stars
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/466/2614
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present a weak-lensing and dynamical study of the complex cluster Abell 1758 (A1758, {bar}z=0.278) supported by hydrodynamical simulations. This cluster is composed of two main structures called A1758N and A1758S. The northern structure is composed of A1758NW and A1758NE, with lensing determined masses of 7.90_-1.55_^+1.89^x10^14^M_{sun}_ and 5.49_-1.33_^+1.67^x10^14^M_{sun}_, respectively. They show a remarkable feature: while in A1758NW, there is a spatial agreement among weak-lensing mass distribution, intracluster medium and its brightest cluster galaxy (BCG), in A1758NE, the X-ray peak is located 96_-15_^+14^ arcsec away from the mass peak and BCG positions. Given the detachment between gas and mass, we could use the local surface mass density to estimate an upper limit for the dark matter self-interaction cross-section: {sigma}/m<5.83cm^2^/g. Combining our velocity data with hydrodynamical simulations, we have shown that A1758 NW and NE had their closest approach 0.27Gyr ago and their merger axis is 21+/-12{deg} from the plane of the sky. In the A1758S system, we have measured a total mass of 4.96_-1.19_^+1.08^x10^14^M_{sun}_ and, using radial velocity data, we found that the main merger axis is located at 70+/-4{deg} from the plane of the sky, therefore closest to the line of sight.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/654/A168
- Title:
- Convective blueshifts for solar-type stars
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/654/A168
- Date:
- 22 Feb 2022
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The detection of earth-mass exoplanets in the habitable zone around solar-mass stars using the radial velocity technique requires extremely high- precision of the order of 10cm/s. This puts the required noise floor below the intrinsic variability of even relatively inactive stars, like the Sun. One such variable is convective blueshift varying temporally, spatially and between spectral lines. We develop a novel approach to measure convective blueshift and determine the strength of convective blueshift for 810 stars observed by the HARPS spectrograph, spanning spectral types from late-F, G, K to early-M. We derive a model to infer blueshift velocity for lines of any depth in later-type stars of any effective temperature. Using a custom list of spectral lines, covering a wide range of absorption depths, we create a model for the line-core shift as a function of line depth, commonly known as the third signature of granulation. For this we utilize an extremely high-resolution solar spectrum (R~1.000.000) to empirically account for the non-linear nature of the third signature. The solar third signature is then scaled to all 810 stars. Through this we obtain a measure of the convective blueshift relative to the Sun as a function of stellar effective temperature. We confirm the general correlation of increasing convective blueshift with effective temperature and establish a tight, cubic relation between the two that strongly increases for stars above ~5800K. For stars between ~4100K and ~4700K we show for the first time a plateau in convective shift and a possible onset of a plateau for stars above 6000K. Stars below ~4000K show neither blue or red shift. We provide a table listing expected blueshift velocities for each spectral subtype in the data set to quickly access the intrinsic noise floor through convective blueshift for the RV technique.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/411/381
- Title:
- CO observation of isolated galaxies
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/411/381
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present ^12^CO(J=1-0) line observations of 99 galaxies obtained with the SEST 15m, the Kitt Peak 12m and the IRAM 30m telescopes. The target galaxies were selected from the catalogue of isolated galaxies of Karachentseva (1973, Cat. <VII/82>). These data are thus representative of the CO properties of isolated late-type galaxies. All objects were observed in their central position, those with large angular sizes were mapped. These new measurements are used to estimate the molecular gas mass of the target galaxies. The molecular gas is on average ~18% of the atomic gas mass.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJS/197/16
- Title:
- CO observations of LMC molecular clouds (MAGMA).
- Short Name:
- J/ApJS/197/16
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present the properties of an extensive sample of molecular clouds in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) mapped at 11pc resolution in the CO(1-0) line. Targets were chosen based on a limiting CO flux and peak brightness as measured by the NANTEN survey. The observations were conducted with the ATNF Mopra Telescope as part of the Magellanic Mopra Assessment. We identify clouds as regions of connected CO emission and find that the distributions of cloud sizes, fluxes, and masses are sensitive to the choice of decomposition parameters.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/VII/50
- Title:
- CO Radial Velocities Toward Galactic H II Regions
- Short Name:
- VII/50
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The catalog contains machine-readable versions of the "Catalog of CO Radial Velocities Toward Galactic HII Regions" (Blitz et al. 1982) and the "Catalog of Carbon Monoxide Observations of Southern Hemisphere HII Regions" (Gillespie et al. 1977) in two separate files. The former is a catalog of 242 molecular cloud complexes that are associated with optical HII regions and includes source names, coordinates, CO radial velocities, antenna temperatures and full width at half-maximum at the position of the strongest CO emission, references for the observations, distances to the stars exciting the HII regions, and optical diameters of the HII regions. The latter is the first CO survey of the southern sky; it was made using the Anglo-Australian 3.9-m optical telescope at 115GHz (2.6-mm wavelength) with a hot-electron bolometer receiver located at the Coude focus. The data were collected during two observing periods (September 1975, April 1976) and include designations, coordinates, median values for the velocities, and distances to the stars exciting the HII regions.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/634/A98
- Title:
- Corona-Australis DANCe. I.
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/634/A98
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- Corona-Australis is one of the nearest regions to the Sun with recent and ongoing star formation, but the current picture of its stellar (and substellar) content is not complete yet. We take advantage of the second data release of the Gaia space mission to revisit the stellar census and search for additional members of the young stellar association in Corona-Australis. We applied a probabilistic method to infer membership probabilities based on a multidimensional astrometric and photometric data set over a field of 128deg^2^ around the dark clouds of the region. We identify 313 high-probability candidate members to the Corona-Australis association, 262 of which had never been reported as members before. Our sample of members covers the magnitude range between G>~5mag and G<~20mag, and it reveals the existence of two kinematically and spatially distinct subgroups. There is a distributed 'off-cloud' population of stars located in the north of the dark clouds that is twice as numerous as the historically known 'on-cloud' population that is concentrated around the densest cores. By comparing the location of the stars in the HR-diagram with evolutionary models, we show that these two populations are younger than 10Myr. Based on their infrared excess emission, we identify 28 Class II and 215 Class III stars among the sources with available infrared photometry, and we conclude that the frequency of Class~II stars (i.e. `disc-bearing' stars) in the on-cloud region is twice as large as compared to the off-cloud population. The distance derived for the Corona-Australis region based on this updated census is d=149.4^+0.4^_-0.4_pc, which exceeds previous estimates by about 20 pc. In this paper we provide the most complete census of stars in Corona-Australis available to date that can be confirmed with Gaia data. Furthermore, we report on the discovery of an extended and more evolved population of young stars beyond the region of the dark clouds, which was extensively surveyed in the past.