- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/AJ/141/53
- Title:
- Lick indices of type II Cepheid candidates
- Short Name:
- J/AJ/141/53
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present low-resolution spectra for variable stars in the Cepheid period range from the ROTSE-I Demonstration Project and the All Sky Automated Survey, some of which were previously identified as type II Cepheid candidates. We have derived effective temperatures, gravities, and metallicities from the spectra. Based on this, three types of variables were identified: Cepheid strip stars, cool stars that lie along the red subgiant and giant branch, and cool main-sequence stars. Many fewer type II Cepheids were found than expected and most have amplitudes less than 0.4mag. The cool variables include many likely binaries as well as intrinsic variables. Variation among the main-sequence stars is likely to be mostly due to binarity or stellar activity.
Number of results to display per page
Search Results
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/AJ/127/1513
- Title:
- Lick indices on M67 members
- Short Name:
- J/AJ/127/1513
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We construct an integrated spectrum of the intermediate-age, solar-metallicity Galactic cluster M67, from individual spectroscopic observations of bona fide cluster members. The spectrum so obtained is used as a template to test our stellar population synthesis models, in an age and metallicity regime where such models remain largely untested. As a result, we demonstrate that our models predict a spectroscopic age of 3.5+/-0.5Gyr for M67, which is the same age we obtain from fitting isochrones to the color-magnitude diagram of the cluster. Full consistency is reached when using either H{beta}, H{gamma}, or H{delta} as the age indicator. We also check if the models, when applied to the cluster integrated spectrum, predict elemental abundances in agreement with the known detailed abundance pattern of the cluster. The models also pass the latter test, by predicting the abundances of iron, magnesium, carbon, and nitrogen in agreement with detailed abundance analyses of cluster stars to within 0.1dex. Encouraged by the high degree of consistency of our models, we apply them to the study of the integrated spectrum of the central 3" of the compact elliptical galaxy M32.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/I/152
- Title:
- Lick Jupiter-Voyager Reference Star Catalogue
- Short Name:
- I/152
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The catalog was prepared for purposes of determining up-to-date, reasonably accurate equatorial coordinates for reference stars in a band of sky against which cameras of the Voyager spacecraft were aligned for observations of Jovian satellites during the Jupiter flyby. The catalog contains accurate equatorial coordinates for equinox 1950.0, epoch 1978.27, photographic and visual magnitudes, AGK3 identifications and proper motions for 4983 stars. All of the reference stars are in the range 6h00m to 8h04m in right ascension (1950), declination zones +16 to +23 degrees, and 8h31m to 8h57m, zones +08 to +14 degrees. Mean errors of the positions are about 0.4 second of arc.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/415/123
- Title:
- Lick line-index and photometry of globular clusters
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/415/123
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The catalog contains Lick line-index and photometric measurements of extragalactic globular clusters in seven early-type galaxies (NGC 1380, 2434, 3115, 3379, 3585, 5846, and 7192) with different morphological types (E/S0) located in field and group/cluster environments. High-quality spectra were taken with the FORS2 instrument at ESO's Very Large Telescope. ~50% of our data allows an age resolution {Delta}t/t~0.3 and a metallicity resolution ~0.25-0.4dex, depending on the absolute metallicity. Globular cluster candidates are selected from deep B, V, R, I, K FORS2/ISAAC photometry with 80-100% success rate inside one effective radius. Using combined optical/near-infrared colour-colour diagrams we present a method to efficiently reduce fore-/background contamination down to <~10%.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/I/200
- Title:
- Lick Northern Proper Motion: NPM1 Ref. Galaxies
- Short Name:
- I/200
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The Lick Northern Proper Motion (NPM) program measured proper motions, positions, and photographic photometry for some 149,000 stars (NPM1 Catalog) covering the sky outside the Milky Way north of declination 23 degrees. The NPM1 proper motions were measured with respect to an absolute reference frame defined by some 50,000 faint galaxies (mostly 16 < B < 18 mag). The rms position errors for the NPM1 reference galaxies average 0.2 arcsec. The rms errors for the B magnitudes average 0.25 mag. More complete descriptive information is available in the ASCII or LaTeX documentation written by R.B. Hanson (UCO/Lick Obs.).
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/I/199A
- Title:
- Lick Northern Proper Motion Program: NPM1 Catalog
- Short Name:
- I/199A
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The NPM1 catalog is the first part of the Lick Northern Proper Motion (NPM) program to measure absolute proper motions, on an inertial system defined by some 50,000 faint galaxies, for some 300,000 stars over a blue apparent magnitude range from 8 to 18. There are 1246 6-degree by 6-degree fields in the NPM survey (to declination -23 degrees). The NPM1 catalog covers the 72% of the northern sky lying outside the Milky Way and contains some 149,000 stars from measures in 899 of the 1246 NPM fields. A second catalog (NPM2) will cover the NPM Milky Way fields. The Yale Southern Proper Motion (SPM) program will complete the southern sky. Each NPM field was photographed at two epochs between 1947 and 1988. The mean first and second epochs are 1950 and 1977; the average epoch difference is 27 years. The first-epoch plates were taken in the blue only; both blue and yellow plates were taken at the second epoch. Some 94000 stars were chosen anonymously for the NPM astrometric reductions and for statistical studies of stellar motions. In addition, the NPM1 catalog contains some 28000 positional reference stars, and some 27000 stars were chosen from the Lick Input Catalog of Special Stars (ICSS). The previous version of the NPM1 Catalog (I/199) deposited with the data centers (ADC and CDS) gives positions for equinox B1950 and computed epoch 1950, and is in one data file (148,940 lines) concatenating the 114 one-degree declination zones from +90 degrees to -23 degrees. Each star has an NPM1 "name" reflecting the declination zone and a running number in right ascension order within the zone. The present J2000 version gives the NPM1 positions transformed into the J2000 system and updated to the epoch 2000 using the NPM1 proper motions. The proper motions have been rotated into the J2000 coordinate system. The J2000 NPM1 Catalog is ordered in zones from +90 degrees to -23 degrees, and within each zone, the stars are sorted in right ascension order. To avoid "renaming" stars, the B1950 NPM1 "names" were retained, but the user must note that these no longer strictly reflect the declination zone and right ascension order in the J2000 NPM1 Catalog. The J2000 NPM1 Catalog is also available as 114 separate files, one for each declination zone from +90 degrees (z+90j) to -23 degrees (z-23j), from http://www.ucolick.org/~npm/NPM1/zones/ Each star's entry includes the absolute proper motion and blue magnitude. For 97% of the stars the color is also given. Other data given for each star are: the original mean epoch, a stellar class code, the number of NPM fields measured, and discrepancy flags for position, proper motion, and photometry. Finally, as an additional identification, the AGK3 (north) or SAO (south) number (if any) is given. The rms errors of the NPM absolute proper motions are about 0.5"/cent in each coordinate. The rms position errors at the catalog epoch 1950 average about 0.15" in each coordinate. The rms errors for the NPM photographic photometry average about 0.2 mag in B, and 0.15 mag in B-V. More complete information is available in the PostScript documentation for the 1993 (B1950) NPM1 Catalog (npm1b.ps), written by R.B. Hanson. We thank the National Science Foundation for its continued support of the NPM program. Recent work was supported by NSF grant AST-9530632. Current work is supported by NSF grant AST-9988105.
7927. Lick NPM2 Catalog
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/I/283A
- Title:
- Lick NPM2 Catalog
- Short Name:
- I/283A
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The NPM2 Catalog is the second part of the Lick Northern Proper Motion (NPM) program to measure absolute proper motions, on an inertial system defined by distant galaxies, for nearly 400,000 stars over a blue apparent magnitude range from 8 to 18. There are 1246 6x6degree fields in the NPM survey (to declination -23 degrees). The NPM2 Catalog covers the 28% of the northern sky lying near the plane of the the Milky Way and contains some 232,000 stars in the 347 NPM fields remaining after the 1993 NPM1 Catalog (149,000 stars in 899 fields away from the Milky Way). Each NPM field was photographed with the 51cm Carnegie Double Astrograph at two epochs between 1947 and 1988. The mean first and second epochs are 1950 and 1977; the average epoch difference is 27 years. The first-epoch plates were taken in the blue only; both blue and yellow plates were taken at the second epoch. For NPM2, the plates were scanned by the Precision Measuring Machine (PMM) at the US Naval Observatory, Flagstaff. From the PMM scans, 120,000 faint (B>14) stars were chosen anonymously for the NPM astrometric reductions and for statistical studies of stellar motions. The NPM2 catalog also contains 92,000 bright (B<14) positional reference stars, mostly from the Tycho-2 Catalogue, and 35,000 stars chosen for astronomical interest from Klemola's "Lick Input Catalog of Special Stars". (These categories overlap). Details of the NPM2 star selection, data reductions, and catalog compilation will be presented in a paper being prepared for the Astronomical Journal. The completed version of the NPM2 Catalog totals 232,062 stars from all 347 NPM2 fields; it supersedes the September 2002 preliminary version (295 fields). Together with the NPM1 Catalog (Cat. I/199, or http://www.ucolick.org/~npm/NPM1/) the NPM2 Catalog completes the Lick Northern Proper Motion program after more than a half-century of work by three generations of Lick Observatory astronomers. The NPM2 catalog gives J2000 positions computed for the catalog epoch 2000, and is ordered in 108 one-degree declination zones from +83 degrees to -23 degrees. Following the convention of the NPM1 catalog, each NPM2 star has an NPM2 "name" (e.g. +83.0001) reflecting the declination zone and a running number in right ascension order within the zone. The NPM2 Catalog is also available as 108 separate files, one for each declination zone from +83 degrees (z+83n) to -23 degrees (z-23n), from http://www.ucolick.org/~npm/NPM2/zones/ Each star's entry includes the absolute proper motion and blue (B) magnitude. For 98.5% of the stars the B-V color is also given. Other data given for each star are: the original mean epoch, a stellar class code, the number of NPM fields on which the star was measured, and discrepancy flags for proper motion, and photometry. Tycho-2 numbers are given for the primary positional reference stars (40% of NPM2); for these stars the Tycho B,V photometry, transformed to Johnson B and B-V, has been averaged with the NPM2 photographic photometry, with appropriate weights. ACRS and Hipparcos numbers are also given for NPM2 stars selected from those catalogs. The RMS precision of the NPM2 individual proper motions is about 0.6"/cent (6mas/yr) in each coordinate, comparable to the NPM1 errors. The NPM2 relative proper motions in each field were reduced to absolute (ICRS system) using an average of 370 Tycho-2 stars per NPM2 field. Magnitude-dependent systematic errors for the brightest (8<B<12) NPM2 stars were removed in the same reductions. The RMS accuracy of the proper motion zero point in each field is about 0.05"/cent (0.5mas/yr) in each coordinate. The RMS position errors at the NPM2 catalog epoch 2000 average about 0.2" (200mas) in each coordinate, due mostly to the accumulated proper motion error from original plate epochs (average 1968) to 2000. The pure positional errors at the original epochs average 0.08" (80mas) in each coordinate. The RMS errors for the NPM photographic photometry average about 0.18mag in B, and 0.20 mag in B-V. We thank the National Science Foundation for its long-term support of the NPM program. The NPM2 phase was supported by NSF grants AST-9530632 and AST-9988105. We thank the Yale Southern Proper Motion group (W. van Altena, I. Platais, and T. Girard) for their help in developing software to process the PMM plate scans.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/837/120
- Title:
- Lick Observatory Supernova Search (LOSS) revisited
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/837/120
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- Most types of supernovae (SNe) have yet to be connected with their progenitor stellar systems. Here, we reanalyze the 10-year SN sample collected during 1998-2008 by the Lick Observatory Supernova Search (LOSS; see Leaman+, 2011, J/MNRAS/412/1419) in order to constrain the progenitors of SNe Ia and stripped-envelope SNe (SE SNe, i.e., SNe IIb, Ib, Ic, and broad-lined Ic). We matched the LOSS galaxy sample with spectroscopy from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and measured SN rates as a function of galaxy stellar mass, specific star formation rate, and oxygen abundance (metallicity). We find significant correlations between the SN rates and all three galaxy properties. The SN Ia correlations are consistent with other measurements, as well as with our previous explanation of these measurements in the form of a combination of the SN Ia delay-time distribution and the correlation between galaxy mass and age. The ratio between the SE SN and SN II rates declines significantly in low-mass galaxies. This rules out single stars as SE SN progenitors, and is consistent with predictions from binary-system progenitor models. Using well-known galaxy scaling relations, any correlation between the rates and one of the galaxy properties examined here can be expressed as a correlation with the other two. These redundant correlations preclude us from establishing causality-that is, from ascertaining which of the galaxy properties (or their combination) is the physical driver for the difference between the SE SN and SN II rates. We outline several methods that have the potential to overcome this problem in future works.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/I/153
- Title:
- Lick Saturn-Voyager Reference Star Catalogue
- Short Name:
- I/153
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The Lick Saturn-Voyager Reference Star Catalogue contains accurate equatorial coordinates for 4551 stars in a band of sky against which cameras of the Voyager spacecraft were pointed for observations in the region of Saturn during the flyby. All of the reference stars are in the range 12h 40min to 14h 12min in right ascension (1950) and +02deg. to -09deg. in declination. Mean errors of the positions are about 0.25".
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/610/A38
- Title:
- Li enrichment histories of the thick/thin disc
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/610/A38
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- Lithium abundance in most of the warm metal-poor main sequence stars shows a constant plateau (A(Li)~2.2dex) and then the upper envelope of the lithium vs. metallicity distribution increases as we approach solar metallicity. Meteorites, which carry information about the chemical composition of the interstellar medium at the solar system formation time, show a lithium abundance A(Li)~3.26dex. This pattern reflects the Li enrichment history of the interstellar medium during the Galaxy lifetime. After the initial Li production in Big Bang Nucleosynthesis, the sources of the enrichment include AGB stars, low-mass red giants, novae, type II supernovae, and Galactic cosmic rays. The total amount of enriched Li is sensitive to the relative contribution of these sources. Thus different Li enrichment histories are expected in the Galactic thick and thin disc. We investigate the main sequence stars observed with UVES in Gaia-ESO Survey iDR4 catalog and find a Li-[alpha/Fe] anticorrelation independent of [Fe/H], Teff, and log(g). Since in stellar evolution different {alpha} enhancements at the same metallicity do not lead to a measurable Li abundance change, the anticorrelation indicates that more Li is produced during the Galactic thin disc phase than during the Galactic thick disc phase. We also find a correlation between the abundance of Li and s-process elements Ba and Y, and they both decrease above the solar metallicity, which can be explained in the framework of the adopted Galactic chemical evolution models.