- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/499/1890
- Title:
- Gaia white dwarfs within 40pc. II.
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/499/1890
- Date:
- 14 Jan 2022 00:10:10
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present an overview of the sample of northern hemisphere white dwarfs within 40pc of the Sun detected from Gaia Data Release 2 (DR2). We find that 521 sources are spectroscopically confirmed degenerate stars, 111 of which were first identified as white dwarf candidates from Gaia DR2 and followed-up recently with the William Herschel Telescope and Gran Telescopio Canarias. Three additional white dwarf candidates remain spectroscopically unobserved and six unresolved binaries are known to include a white dwarf but were not in our initial selection in the Gaia DR2 Hertzsprung-Russell diagram (HRD). Atmospheric parameters are calculated from Gaia and Pan-STARRS photometry for all objects in the sample, confirming most of the trends previously observed in the much smaller 20pc sample. Local white dwarfs are overwhelmingly consistent with Galactic disc kinematics, with only four halo candidates. We find that DAZ white dwarfs are significantly less massive than the overall DA population (MDAZ_avg_=0.59M_{sun}_, MDA_avg_=0.66M_{sun}_). It may suggest that planet formation is less efficient at higher mass stars, producing more massive white dwarfs. We detect a sequence of crystallised white dwarfs in the mass range from 0.6<=M/M_{sun}_<=1.0 and find that the vast majority of objects on the sequence have standard kinematic properties that correspond to the average of the sample, suggesting that their nature can be explained by crystallisation alone. We also detect 26 double degenerates and white dwarf components in 56 wide binary systems.
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Search Results
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/VIII/100
- Title:
- GaLactic and Extragalactic All-sky MWA survey
- Short Name:
- VIII/100
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- Using the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA), the low-frequency Square Kilometre Array (SKA1 LOW) precursor located in Western Australia, we have completed the GaLactic and Extragalactic All-sky MWA (GLEAM) survey, and present the resulting extragalactic catalogue, utilising the first year of observations. The catalogue covers 24,402 square degrees, over declinations south of +30{deg} and Galactic latitudes outside 10{deg} of the Galactic plane, excluding some areas such as the Magellanic Clouds. It contains 307,456 radio sources with 20 separate flux density measurements across 72-231MHz, selected from a time- and frequency- integrated image centred at 200MHz, with a resolution of ~=2'. Over the catalogued region, we estimate that the catalogue is 90% complete at 170mJy, and 50% complete at 55mJy, and large areas are complete at even lower flux density levels. Its reliability is 99.97% above the detection threshold of 5{sigma}, which itself is typically 50mJy. These observations constitute the widest fractional bandwidth and largest sky area survey at radio frequencies to date, and calibrate the low frequency flux density scale of the southern sky to better than 10%. This paper presents details of the flagging, imaging, mosaicking, and source extraction/characterisation, as well as estimates of the completeness and reliability. All source measurements and images are available online. This is the first in a series of publications describing the GLEAM survey results.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/AcA/66/405
- Title:
- Galactic bulge eclipsing & ellipsoidal binaries
- Short Name:
- J/AcA/66/405
- Date:
- 25 Oct 2021 09:34:13
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present a collection of 450598 eclipsing and ellipsoidal binary systems detected in the OGLE fields toward the Galactic bulge. The collection consists of binary systems of all types: detached, semi-detached, and contact eclipsing binaries, RS CVn stars, cataclysmic variables, HWVir binaries, double periodic variables, and even planetary transits. For all stars we provide the I- and V-band time-series photometry obtained during the OGLE-II, OGLE-III, and OGLE-IV surveys. We discuss methods used to identify binary systems in the OGLE data and present several objects of particular interest.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/438/2839
- Title:
- Galactic Bulge Survey X-ray sources NIR ctp
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/438/2839
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We report on the near-infrared matches, drawn from three surveys, to the 1640 unique X-ray sources detected by Chandra in the Galactic Bulge Survey (GBS). This survey targets faint X-ray sources in the bulge, with a particular focus on accreting compact objects. We present all viable counterpart candidates and associate a false alarm probability (FAP) to each near-infrared match in order to identify the most likely counterparts. The FAP takes into account a statistical study involving a chance alignment test, as well as considering the positional accuracy of the individual X-ray sources. We find that although the star density in the bulge is very high, ~90 per cent of our sources have an FAP<10 per cent, indicating that for most X-ray sources, viable near-infrared counterparts candidates can be identified. In addition to the FAP, we provide positional and photometric information for candidate counterparts to ~95 per cent of the GBS X-ray sources. This information in combination with optical photometry, spectroscopy and variability constraints will be crucial to characterize and classify secure counterparts.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/585/A141
- Title:
- Galactic center early-type stars catalog
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/585/A141
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- It is still unclear whether the Sagittarius spiral arm is a major spiral arm in the Galaxy or whether it just outlines a region of enhanced star formation because of the local compression of gas. The best way to separate these scenarios out is to study the kinematics across the arm to determine the velocity perturbation it induces. A survey of early-type stars in the direction of the Galactic center is performed covering an area of 100 sq. deg with the aim of identifying candidates for a radial velocity study. Objective prism plates were obtained with the 4{deg} prism on the ESO Schmidt telescope using IIaO, 4415, and IIIaJ emulsions. The plates were digitized and more than 100k spectra were extracted down to a limiting magnitude of B=15m. The spectra were cross-correlated with a template with Balmer lines, which yielded a candidate list of 12675 early-type stars. Magnitudes and equivalent widths of strong lines were calculated from the spectra, which allowed us to estimate the individual extinctions and distances for 11075 stars.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJS/181/110
- Title:
- Galactic center X-ray sources
- Short Name:
- J/ApJS/181/110
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present a catalog of 9017 X-ray sources identified in Chandra observations of a 2{deg}x0.8{deg} field around the Galactic center. This enlarges the number of known X-ray sources in the region by a factor of 2.5. The catalog incorporates all of the ACIS-I observations as of 2007 August, which total 2.25Ms of exposure. At the distance to the Galactic center (8kpc), we are sensitive to sources with luminosities of 4x10^32^erg/s (0.5-8.0keV; 90% confidence) over an area of 1deg^2^, and up to an order of magnitude more sensitive in the deepest exposure (1.0Ms) around Sgr A*. The positions of 60% of our sources are accurate to <1" (95% confidence), and 20% have positions accurate to <0.5". We search for variable sources, and find that 3% exhibit flux variations within an observation, and 10% exhibit variations from observation-to-observation. We also find one source, CXOUGC J174622.7-285218, with a periodic 1745s signal (1.4% chance probability), which is probably a magnetically accreting cataclysmic variable. We compare the spatial distribution of X-ray sources to a model for the stellar distribution, and find 2.8{sigma} evidence for excesses in the numbers of X-ray sources in the region of recent star formation encompassed by the Arches, Quintuplet, and Galactic center star clusters. These excess sources are also seen in the luminosity distribution of the X-ray sources, which is flatter near the Arches and Quintuplet than elsewhere in the field. These excess point sources, along with a similar longitudinal asymmetry in the distribution of diffuse iron emission that has been reported by other authors, probably have their origin in the young stars that are prominent at l~0.1{deg}.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/779/79
- Title:
- Galactic CHaMP. II. Dense gas clumps.
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/779/79
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The Census of High- and Medium-mass Protostars (CHaMP) is the first large-scale (280{deg}<l<300{deg}, -4{deg}<b<2{deg}), unbiased, subparsec resolution survey of Galactic molecular clumps and their embedded stars. Barnes et al. (Paper I, 2011, J/ApJS/196/12) presented the source catalog of ~300 clumps based on HCO^+^(1-0) emission, used to estimate masses M. Here we use archival midinfrared-to-millimeter continuum data to construct spectral energy distributions. Fitting two-temperature gray-body models, we derive bolometric luminosities, L. We find that the clumps have 10<~L/L_{sun}_<~10^6.5^ and 0.1<~L/M/[L_{sun}_/M_{sun}_]<~10^3^, consistent with a clump population spanning a range of instantaneous star-formation efficiencies from 0 to ~50%. We thus expect L/M to be a useful, strongly varying indicator of clump evolution during the star cluster formation process.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/831/67
- Title:
- Galactic CHaMP. III. ^12^CO dense clump properties
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/831/67
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We report the second complete molecular line data release from the Census of High- and Medium-mass Protostars (CHaMP), a large-scale, unbiased, uniform mapping survey at sub-parsec resolution, of millimeter-wave line emission from 303 massive, dense molecular clumps in the Milky Way. This release is for all ^12^CO J=1->0 emission associated with the dense gas, the first from Phase II of the survey, which includes ^12^CO, ^13^CO, and C^18^O. The observed clump emission traced by both ^12^CO and HCO^+^ (from Phase I) shows very similar morphology, indicating that, for dense molecular clouds and complexes of all sizes, parsec-scale clumps contain {Xi}~75% of the mass, while only 25% of the mass lies in extended (>~10pc) or "low density" components in these same areas. The mass fraction of all gas above a density of 10^9^m^-3^ is {xi}_9_>~50%. This suggests that parsec-scale clumps may be the basic building blocks of the molecular interstellar medium, rather than the standard giant molecular cloud (GMC) concept. Using ^12^CO emission, we derive physical properties of these clumps in their entirety, and compare them to properties from HCO^+^, tracing their denser interiors. We compare the standard X-factor converting I_^12^CO_ to N_H2_ with alternative conversions, and show that only the latter give whole-clump properties that are physically consistent with those of their interiors. We infer that the clump population is systematically closer to virial equilibrium than when considering only their interiors, with perhaps half being long-lived (10s of Myr), pressure-confined entities that only terminally engage in vigorous massive star formation, supporting other evidence along these lines that was previously published.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/763/32
- Title:
- Galactic halo RRab stars from CSS
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/763/32
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present analysis of 12227 type-ab RR Lyraes (RRLs; ~9400 are newly discovered) found among the 200 million public light curves in Catalina Surveys Data Release 1. These stars span the largest volume of the Milky Way ever surveyed with RRLs, covering ~20000deg^2^ of the sky (0{deg}<{alpha}<360{deg}, -22{deg}<{delta}<65{deg}) to heliocentric distances of up to 60kpc. Each of the RRLs is observed between 60 and 419 times over a six-year period. Using period finding and Fourier fitting techniques we determine periods and apparent magnitudes for each source. We find that the periods are generally accurate to {sigma}=0.002% in comparison to 2842 previously known RRLs and 100 RRLs observed in overlapping survey fields. We photometrically calibrate the light curves using 445 Landolt standard stars and show that the resulting magnitudes are accurate to ~0.05mag using Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) data for ~1000 blue horizontal branch stars and 7788 RRLs. By combining Catalina photometry with SDSS spectroscopy, we analyze the radial velocity and metallicity distributions for >1500 of the RRLs. Using the accurate distances derived for the RRLs, we show the paths of the Sagittarius tidal streams crossing the sky at heliocentric distances from 20 to 60kpc. By selecting samples of Galactic halo RRLs, we compare their velocity, metallicity, and distance with predictions from a recent detailed N-body model of the Sagittarius system. We find that there are some significant differences between the distances and structures predicted and our observations.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJS/249/23
- Title:
- Galactic Plane Infrared Polarization Survey, DR4
- Short Name:
- J/ApJS/249/23
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The Galactic Plane Infrared Polarization Survey (GPIPS) seeks to characterize the magnetic field in the dusty Galactic disk using near-infrared stellar polarimetry. All GPIPS observations were completed using the 1.83m Perkins telescope and Mimir instrument. GPIPS observations surveyed 76 deg^2^ of the northern Galactic plane, from Galactic longitudes 18{deg}-56{deg} and latitudes -1{deg} to +1{deg}, in the H band (1.6 {mu}m). Surveyed stars span 7th-16th mag, resulting in nearly 10 million stars with measured linear polarizations. Of these stars, ones with m_H_<12.5mag and polarization percentage uncertainties under 2% were judged to be high quality and number over one million. GPIPS data reveal plane-of-sky magnetic field orientations for numerous interstellar clouds for A_V_ values to ~30mag. The average sky separation of stars with m_H_<12.5mag is about 30'', or about 60 per Planck polarization resolution element. Matching to Gaia DR2 showed the brightest GPIPS stars are red giants with distances in the 0.6-7.5kpc range. Polarization orientations are mostly parallel to the Galactic disk, with some zones showing significant orientation departures. Changes in orientations are stronger as a function of Galactic longitude than of latitude. Considered at 10' angular scales, directions that show the greatest polarization fractions and narrowest polarization position angle distributions are confined to about 10 large, coherent structures that are not correlated with star-forming clouds. The GPIPS polarimetric and photometric data products (Data Release 4 catalogs and images) are publicly available for over 13 million stars.