- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/II/223
- Title:
- First Byurakan Survey (FBS), 2nd Program
- Short Name:
- II/223
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The First Byurakan Survey (FBS), also known as the Markarian survey, covers about 17000 sq. deg. It has been used by Markarian and his collaborators to search for UV excess galaxies (see Cat. <VII/172>) and by Abrahamian and his collaborators to search for UV excess or emission line starlike objets. The identification, classification, and investigation of all blue stellar objects in the Survey constitutes the second part of the First Byurakan Survey and is a natural continuation of it. For this second program, at the present time, 4109 sq. deg. have been searched (33 < {delta} < 45 deg and {delta} > 61 deg, excluding the galactic plane) and a catalogue of 1103 blue stellar objects has been built. It has been published in a series of eleven papers referenced in the "References" section below. More details can be found in Mickaelian et al. 1999, Astrofizika 42,5: 'On the nature of the FBS blue stellar objects and the completeness of the Bright Quasar Survey'. Some accurate optical positions were measured by M. Veron, replacing the original FBS position.
Number of results to display per page
Search Results
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/601/A81
- Title:
- FIRST catalog of FR II radio galaxies
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/601/A81
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We built a catalog of 122 FR II radio galaxies, called FRIICAT, selected from a published sample obtained by combining observations from the NVSS, FIRST, and SDSS surveys. The catalog includes sources with redshift <=0.15, an edge-brightened radio morphology, and those with at least one of the emission peaks located at radius r larger than 30 kpc from the center of the host. The radio luminosity at 1.4GHz of the FRIICAT sources covers the range L1.4~10^39.5^-10^42.5^erg/s. The FRIICAT catalog has 90% of low and 10% of high excitation galaxies (LEGs and HEGs), respectively. The properties of these two classes are significantly different. The FRIICAT LEGs are mostly luminous (-20>~Mr>~-24), red early-type galaxies with black hole masses in the range 10^8^<~M_BH_<~10^9^M_{sun}_; they are essentially indistinguishable from the FR Is belonging to the FRICAT. The HEG FR IIs are associated with optically bluer and mid-IR redder hosts than the LEG FR IIs and to galaxies and black holes that are smaller, on average, by a factor ~2. FR IIs have a factor ~3higher average radio luminosity than FR Is. Nonetheless, most (~90%) of the selected FR IIs have a radio power that is lower, by as much as a factor of ~100, than the transition value between FR Is and FR IIs found in the 3C sample. The correspondence between the morphological classification of FR I and FR II and the separation in radio power disappears when including sources selected at low radio flux thresholds, which is in line with previous results. In conclusion, a radio source produced by a low power jet can be edge brightened or edge darkened, and the outcome is not related to differences in the optical properties of the host galaxy.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+AS/135/133
- Title:
- First DENIS I-band extragalactic catalog
- Short Name:
- J/A+AS/135/133
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- REDCAT is the release of the provisional extragalactic catalogue constructed from the "Deep Near Infrared Southern Sky Survey" (DENIS). This catalogue contains 20260 galaxies with coordinates and I-band photometry (magnitude, diameter, axis ratio, position angle and a parameter related to the morphological type). In this new version photometric parameters are homogeneized to I-band measurements by Mathewson and Ford (1997, Cat. <J/ApJS/107/97>). Additional information on galaxies cross-identified with known objects can be obtained through the LEDA database at: http://www-obs.univ-lyon1.fr/leda/leda-consult.html This catalogue is the result of a tremendous work done along the chain Chile-Paris-Lyon. Many people are involved in this programm conducted by the P.I. N. Epchtein. We will not take the risk to mention them all. Their names will appear in forthcoming papers. The distribution on the sky is made of strips of 30 degrees in declination (180 frames per strip) south of +02{deg}. If you are satisfied with this catalogue, try to push the Community to support the DENIS project. Your suggestions are welcome for any improvement of this first release.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/715/429
- Title:
- First Fermi-LAT AGN catalog (1LAC)
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/715/429
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present the first catalog of active galactic nuclei (AGNs) detected by the Large Area Telescope (LAT), corresponding to 11 months of data collected in scientific operation mode. The First LAT AGN Catalog (1LAC) includes 671 {gamma}-ray sources located at high Galactic latitudes (|b|>10{deg}) that are detected with a test statistic greater than 25 and associated statistically with AGNs. Some LAT sources are associated with multiple AGNs, and consequently, the catalog includes 709 AGNs, comprising 300 BL Lacertae objects, 296 flat-spectrum radio quasars, 41 AGNs of other types, and 72 AGNs of unknown type. We also classify the blazars based on their spectral energy distributions as archival radio, optical, and X-ray data permit. In addition to the formal 1LAC sample, we provide AGN associations for 51 low-latitude LAT sources and AGN "affiliations" (unquantified counterpart candidates) for 104 high-latitude LAT sources without AGN associations.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+AS/141/469
- Title:
- First list of the Karachentsev catalog
- Short Name:
- J/A+AS/141/469
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present HI observations of the galaxies in the first list of the Karachentsev catalog of previously unknown nearby dwarf galaxies (Karachentseva & Karachentsev, 1998, Cat. <J/A+AS/127/409>). This survey covers all known nearby galaxy groups within the Local Volume (i.e. within 10Mpc) and their environment, that is about 25% of the total sky. A total of 257 galaxies have been observed with a detection rate of 60%. We searched a frequency band corresponding to heliocentric radial velocities from -470km/s to ~+4000km/s. Non-detections are either due to limited coverage in radial velocity, confusion with Local HI (mainly in the velocity range -140km/s to +20km/s), or lack of sensitivity for very weak emission. 25% of the detected galaxies are located within the Local Volume. Those galaxies are dwarf galaxies judged by their optical linear diameter (1.4+/-0.2kpc on the average), their mean total HI mass (4.6x10^7^M_{sun}_), and their observed linewidths (39km/s).
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/AJ/128/1
- Title:
- First Look Survey: NOAO R-band Mosaic
- Short Name:
- J/AJ/128/1
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present R-band images covering more than 11 square degrees of sky that were obtained in preparation for the Spitzer Space Telescope First-Look Survey (FLS). The FLS was designed to characterize the mid-infrared sky at depths 2 orders of magnitude deeper than previous surveys. The extragalactic component is the first cosmological survey done with Spitzer. Source catalogs extracted from the R-band images are also presented. The R-band images were obtained using the Mosaic-1 camera on the 4m Mayall Telescope of the Kitt Peak National Observatory. Two relatively large regions of the sky were observed to modest depth: the main FLS extragalactic field (17h18m00s, +59{deg}30'00.0"[J2000]; l=88.3{deg}, b=+34.9{deg}) and the ELAIS-N1 field (16h10m01s, +54{deg}30'36.0"; l=84.2{deg}, b=+44.9{deg}). While both these fields were in early plans for the FLS, only a single deep-pointing test observation was made at the ELAIS-N1 location. The larger Legacy program SWIRE will include this region among its surveyed areas. The data products of our KPNO imaging (images and object catalogs) are made available to the community through the World Wide Web (via the Spitzer Science Center and NOAO Science Archive, http://ssc.spitzer.caltech.edu/fls/). The overall quality of the images is high. The measured positions of sources detected in the images have rms uncertainties in their absolute positions on the order of 0.35" with possible systematic offsets on the order of 0.1", depending on the reference frame of comparison. The relative astrometric accuracy is much better than 1/10 of an arcsecond. Typical delivered image quality in the images is 1.1" full width at half-maximum. The images are relatively deep, since they reach a median 5{sigma} depth limiting magnitude of R=25.5 (Vega) as measured within a 1.35 FWHM aperture, for which the signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) is maximal. Catalogs have been extracted with SExtractor, using thresholds in area and flux for which the number of false detections is below 1% at R=25. Only sources with S/N>3 have been retained in the final catalogs. Comparing the galaxy number counts from our images with those of deeper R-band surveys, we estimate that our observations are 50% complete at R=24.5. These limits in depth are sufficient to identify a substantial fraction of the infrared sources that will be detected by Spitzer.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/699/L43
- Title:
- FIRST-NVSS-SDSS AGN sample catalog
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/699/L43
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- Radio outflows of active galactic nuclei (AGNs) are invoked in cosmological models as a key feedback mechanism in the latest phases of massive galaxy formation. Recently, it has been suggested that the two major radio AGN populations-the powerful high-excitation, and the weak low-excitation radio AGNs (HERAGN and LERAGN, respectively)-represent two earlier and later stages of massive galaxy buildup. To test this, here we make use of a local (0.04<z<0.1) sample of ~500 radio AGNs with available optical spectroscopy, drawn from the FIRST, NVSS, SDSS, and 3CRR surveys.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/AJ/130/1977
- Title:
- FIRST-Optical-VLA survey for lensed radio lobes
- Short Name:
- J/AJ/130/1977
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present results from a survey for gravitationally lensed radio lobes. Lensed lobes are a potentially richer source of information about galaxy mass distributions than lensed point sources, which have been the exclusive focus of other recent surveys. Our approach is to identify radio lobes in the Faint Images of the Radio Sky at Twenty cm (FIRST, Cat. <VIII/71>) catalog and then search optical catalogs for coincident foreground galaxies, which are candidate lensing galaxies. We then obtain higher resolution images of these targets at both optical and radio wavelengths and obtain optical spectra for the most promising candidates. We present maps of several radio lobes that are nearly coincident with galaxies. We have not found any new and unambiguous cases of gravitational lensing. One radio lobe in particular, FOV J0743+1553, has two hot spots that could be multiple images produced by a z=0.19 spiral galaxy, but the lensing interpretation is problematic.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/883/175
- Title:
- First release of the MaNGA Stellar Library (MaStar)
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/883/175
- Date:
- 29 Nov 2021 07:46:33
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present the first release of the MaNGA Stellar Library (MaStar), which is a large, well-calibrated, high-quality empirical library covering the wavelength range 3622-10354{AA} at a resolving power of R~1800. The spectra were obtained using the same instrument as used by the Mapping Nearby Galaxies at Apache Point Observatory (MaNGA) project, by piggybacking on the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS-IV)/Apache Point Observatory Galaxy Evolution Experiment 2-N (APOGEE-2N) observations. Compared to previous empirical libraries, the MaStar library will have a higher number of stars and a more comprehensive stellar-parameter coverage, especially of cool dwarfs, low-metallicity stars, and stars with different [{alpha}/Fe], achieved by a sophisticated target-selection strategy that takes advantage of stellar-parameter catalogs from the literature. This empirical library will provide a new basis for stellar-population synthesis and is particularly well suited for stellar-population analysis of MaNGA galaxies. The first version of the library contains 8646 high-quality per-visit spectra for 3321 unique stars. Compared to photometry, the relative flux calibration of the library is accurate to 3.9% in g-r, 2.7% in r-i, and 2.2% in i-z. The data are released as part of SDSS Data Release 15. We expect the final release of the library to contain more than 10000 stars.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/AJ/133/2097
- Title:
- FIRST "Winged" and X-shaped radio source candidates
- Short Name:
- J/AJ/133/2097
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- A small number of double-lobed radio galaxies (17 from our own census of the literature) show an additional pair of low surface brightness "wings," thus forming an overall X-shaped appearance. Using the VLA FIRST survey database, we are compiling a large sample of winged and X-shaped radio sources for such studies. As a first step toward this goal, an initial sample of 100 new candidate objects of this type are presented in this paper.