- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/327/588
- Title:
- Las Campanas/AAT Rich Cluster Survey - I
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/327/588
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The Las Campanas Observatory and Anglo-Australian Telescope Rich Cluster Survey (LARCS) is a panoramic imaging and spectroscopic survey of an X-ray luminosity-selected sample of 21 clusters of galaxies at 0.97<z<0.16. Charge-coupled device (CCD) imaging was obtained in B and R of typically 2{deg} wide regions centred on the 21 clusters, and the galaxy sample selected from the imaging is being used for an on-going spectroscopic survey of the clusters with the 2dF spectrograph on the Anglo-Australian Telescope.
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- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/VII/203
- Title:
- Las Campanas Redshift Survey
- Short Name:
- VII/203
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The Las Campanas Redshift Survey (LCRS) consists of 26,418 redshifts of galaxies selected from a CCD-based catalog obtained in the R band. The survey covers over 700deg^2 in six strips, each 1.5x80deg, three each in the north and south Galactic caps. The median redshift in the survey is about 30,000km/s. Essential features of the galaxy selection and redshift measurement methods are described and tabulated here. These details are important for subsequent analysis of the LCRS data. Two-dimensional representations of the redshift distributions reveal many repetitions of voids, on the scale of about 5000km/s, sharply bounded by large walls of galaxies as seen in nearby surveys. Statistical investigations of the mean galaxy properties and of clustering on the large scale are reported elsewhere. These include studies of the luminosity function, power spectrum in two and three dimensions, correlation function, pairwise velocity distribution, identification of large-scale structures, and a group catalog.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/414/2528
- Title:
- LBA Calibrator Survey (LCS1)
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/414/2528
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present a catalogue of accurate positions and correlated flux densities for 410 flat-spectrum, compact extragalactic radio sources previously detected in the AT20G survey. The catalogue spans the declination range [-90{deg}, -40{deg}] and was constructed from four 24-hour VLBI observing sessions with the Australian Long Baseline Array at 8.3GHz. The VLBI detection rate in these experiments is 97%, the median uncertainty of the source positions is 2.6mas, and the median correlated flux density on projected baselines longer than 1000km is 0.14Jy. The goals of this work are 1) to provide a pool of southern sources with positions accurate to a few milliarcsec, which can be used for phase referencing observations, geodetic VLBI and space navigation; 2) to extend the complete flux-limited sample of compact extragalactic sources to the southern hemisphere; and 3) to investigate the parsec-scale properties of high-frequency selected sources from the AT20G survey. As a result of this VLBI campaign, the number of compact radio sources south of declination -40 deg which have measured VLBI correlated flux densities and positions known to milliarcsec accuracy has increased by a factor of 3.5. The catalogue and supporting material is available at http://astrogeo.org/lcs1.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJS/130/237
- Title:
- LCRS loose groups of galaxies
- Short Name:
- J/ApJS/130/237
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- A "friends-of-friends" percolation algorithm has been used to extract a catalog of {delta}n/n=80 density enhancements (groups) from the six slices of the Las Campanas Redshift Survey (LCRS). The full catalog contains 1495 groups and includes 35% of the LCRS galaxy sample. A clean sample of 394 groups has been derived by culling groups from the full sample that either are too close to a slice edge, have a crossing time greater than a Hubble time, have a corrected velocity dispersion of zero, or contain a 55"-'orphan' (a galaxy with a mock redshift that was excluded from the original LCRS redshift catalog due to its proximity to another galaxy, i.e., within 55").
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/VII/242
- Title:
- LEDA galaxies with DENIS measurements catalog
- Short Name:
- VII/242
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present a catalog of near-infrared properties of LEDA galaxies, using the full resolution images from the DENIS survey. The fluxes are integrated in eight homothetic ellipses defined by their proper axis ratio, position angle and major axis (up to twice the blue diameter at the isophote 25mag/arcsec^2^) extracted from the LEDA database. From the curves of growth in I, J and K_ms_ photometric bands, we estimated different apparent magnitudes and diameters ("total", "Kron" and "isophotal"). Isophotal parameters refer to the limiting surface brightnesses : 22.5(Imag)/arcsec^2^, 21.0(Jmag)/arcsec^2^ and 20.0(K_ms_mag)/arcsec^2^ for the three photometric bands, respectively. The result is a catalog of 753 153 objects (among which there are 508 224 galaxies, 34 449 probable galaxies and 210 480 galaxies to be confirmed). The catalog gives about (the figures vary, depending on the considered magnitude or diameter) : 668 000 I-band magnitudes, 576 000 J-band magnitudes, 357 000 K_ms_-band magnitudes and 452 000 I-band diameters, 299 000 J-band diameters, 114 000 K_ms_-band diameters. The typical standard deviations for I, J and K_ms_ magnitudes are 0.14, 0.15 and 0.25, respectively, for magnitudes limited at I=16, J=15 and K_ms_=14. The contamination by superimposed objects probably remains the major source of problems and could require future improvement. The completeness limits in magnitude are about : 15.5, 14.5 and 13 in I, J and K_ms_, respectively.
- 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/J/ApJS/244/3
- Title:
- Linear structural param. of SDSS+UKIDSS+WISE gal.
- Short Name:
- J/ApJS/244/3
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- Accurate measurements of galaxy structure are prerequisites for quantitative investigation of galaxy properties or evolution. Yet galaxy inclination, through projection and varying dust effects, strongly affects many commonly used metrics of galaxy structure. Here we demonstrate that collapsing a galaxy's light distribution onto its major axis gives a "linear brightness profile" that is unaffected by projection. In analogy to widely used half-light radius and concentrations, we use two metrics to describe this light distribution: x_50_, the linear distance containing half of the galaxy's luminosity, and c_x_=x_90_/x_50_, the ratio between the 90% light distance and the 50% light distance. In order to minimize the effects of dust, we apply this technique to a diverse sample of galaxies with moderately deep and high-resolution K-band imaging from the UKIDSS Large Area Survey. Using simulated galaxy images, we find that while our measurements are primarily limited by the surface brightness in the outer parts of galaxies, most local galaxies have high enough surface brightnesses to result in reliable measurements. When applied to real data, our metrics vary from face-on to edge-on by typically ~5% in c_x_ and ~12% in x_50_, representing factors of several to 10 improvement over existing optical and some infrared catalog measures of galaxy structure. We release a sample of 23804 galaxies with inclination-independent and dust-penetrated observational proxies for stellar mass, specific star formation rate, half-light size, and concentration.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/459/3130
- Title:
- Lists of arm and interarm supernovae
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/459/3130
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- Using a sample of 215 supernovae (SNe), we analyse their positions relative to the spiral arms of their host galaxies, distinguishing grand-design (GD) spirals from non-GD (NGD) galaxies. We find that: (1) in GD galaxies, an offset exists between the positions of Ia and core-collapse (CC) SNe relative to the peaks of arms, while in NGD galaxies the positions show no such shifts; (2) in GD galaxies, the positions of CC SNe relative to the peaks of arms are correlated with the radial distance from the galaxy nucleus. Inside (outside) the corotation radius, CC SNe are found closer to the inner (outer) edge. No such correlation is observed for SNe in NGD galaxies nor for SNe Ia in either galaxy class; (3) in GD galaxies, SNe Ibc occur closer to the leading edges of the arms than do SNe II, while in NGD galaxies they are more concentrated towards the peaks of arms. In both samples of hosts, the distributions of SNe Ia relative to the arms have broader wings. These observations suggest that shocks in spiral arms of GD galaxies trigger star formation in the leading edges of arms affecting the distributions of CC SNe (known to have short-lived progenitors). The closer locations of SNe Ibc versus SNe II relative to the leading edges of the arms supports the belief that SNe Ibc have more massive progenitors. SNe Ia having less massive and older progenitors, have more time to drift away from the leading edge of the spiral arms.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/330/547
- Title:
- Local galaxy ages and metallicities
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/330/547
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We have assembled a catalogue of relative ages, metallicities and abundance ratios for about 150 local galaxies in field, group and cluster environments. The galaxies span morphological types from cD and ellipticals, to late-type spirals. Ages and metallicities were estimated from high-quality published spectral line indices using Worthey & Ottaviani (1997, Cat. <J/ApJS/111/377>) single stellar population evolutionary models. The identification of galaxy age as a fourth parameter in the fundamental plane (Forbes, Ponman & Brown, 1998ApJ...508L..43F) is confirmed by our larger sample of ages. We investigate trends between age and metallicity, and with other physical parameters of the galaxies, such as ellipticity, luminosity and kinematic anisotropy. We demonstrate the existence of a galaxy age-metallicity relation similar to that seen for local galactic disc stars, whereby young galaxies have high metallicity, while old galaxies span a large range in metallicities. We also investigate the influence of environment and morphology on the galaxy age and metallicity, especially the predictions made by semi-analytic hierarchical clustering models (HCM). We confirm that non-cluster ellipticals are indeed younger on average than cluster ellipticals as predicted by the HCM models. However we also find a trend for the more luminous galaxies to have a higher [Mg/Fe] ratio than the lower luminosity galaxies, which is opposite to the expectation from HCM models.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/AJ/153/6
- Title:
- Local Tully-Fisher relation for dwarf galaxies
- Short Name:
- J/AJ/153/6
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We study different incarnations of the Tully-Fisher (TF) relation for the Local Volume (LV) galaxies taken from Updated Nearby Galaxy Catalog. The UNGC sample contains 656 galaxies with W_50_ HI-line-width estimates, mostly belonging to low-mass dwarfs. Of them, 296 objects have distances measured with accuracies better than 10%. For the sample of 331 LV galaxies having baryonic masses logM_bar_>5.8logM_{Sun}_, we obtain a relation logM_bar_=2.49logW_50_+3.97 with an observed scatter of 0.38dex. The largest factors affecting the scatter are observational errors in K-band magnitudes and W_50_ line widths for the tiny dwarfs, as well as uncertainty of their inclinations. We find that accounting for the surface brightness of the LV galaxies or their gas fraction, specific star-formation rate, or isolation index does not essentially reduce the observed scatter on the baryonic TF diagram. We also notice that a sample of 71 dSph satellites of the Milky Way and M31 with a known stellar velocity dispersion {sigma}* tends to follow nearly the same bTF relation, having slightly lower masses than that of late-type dwarfs.