Stripe 82 Photometric Redshifts from SDSS Coadditions
Short Name:
s82 coadd cone
Date:
27 Dec 2024 08:31:03
Publisher:
The GAVO DC team
Description:
This survey gives photometric redshifts of objects within 275 deg²
(−50◦ < α < 60◦ and −1.◦25 < δ < +1.◦25) centered on the Celestial
Equator. Each piece of sky has ∼20 runs of repeated scanning by the
SDSS camera contributing and thus reaches ∼2 mag fainter than the SDSS
single pass data, i.e., to r ∼ 23.5 for galaxies.
The SuperCOSMOS data primarily originate from scans of the UK Schmidt
and Palomar POSS II blue, red and near-IR sky surveys. The ESO Schmidt
R (dec < -17.5) and Palomar POSS-I E (dec > -17.5) surveys have also
been scanned and provide an early (1st) epoch red measurement.
Mirrored here is the source table containing four-plate multi-colour,
multi-epoch data which are merged into a single source catalogue for
general science exploitation. Within the GAVO DC, some column names
have been adapted to local customs (primarily positions, proper
motions).
This draft standard describes a means to present usage examples for
TAP services in a way that is partially machine readable while
primarily being consumable by humans. This is now part of DALI;
identifiers created as fragments into this record are invalid and must
now point to fragments of http://www.ivoa.net/rdf/examples.
TEUV corrects synthetic stellar fluxes for interstellar absorption
for wavelengths smaller than 91.1 nm. It simulates radiative
bound-free absorption of the ground states of H, He, C, N, and O using
Opacity Project data. Two interstellar components with different
radial and turbulent velocities, temperatures, and column densities
are considered.
This table is a subset of GaiaSource comprising those stars in the
Hipparcos and Tycho-2 Catalogues for which a full 5-parameter
astrometric solution has been possible in Gaia Data Release 1. This is
possible because the early Hipparcos epoch positions break some
degeneracies due to the limited Gaia time coverage. This table
contains a substantial fraction of the around 2.5 million stars in the
Hipparcos and Tycho-2 catalogue. Many stars have been excluded due to
several reasons, such as saturation, cross-match errors or bad
astrometric solution. All rows have Gaia solution id
1635378410781933568.
The tutorial uses VOSA to analyse members of the Collinder 69 open
cluster by crossmatching a given local set of objects and accesses VO
services to crossmatch the objects with 2MASS to receive colors. The
resulting SEDs are analysed using different fit functions.
Within this use case you learn about the constellations of the
Zodiac, i.e. those crossed by the apparent path of the Sun during the
year. Together with some characteristics the orbital motion of the
Earth, in this use case you also find a short excursion into history
of astronomy. The use case also introduces the precession of the
equinoxes.
Within this use case you discover the shape and thickness of the disc
of our own Galaxy by counting stars within and around the Milky Way.
With the use of both Aladin and Stellarium you draw the line
corresponding to the disc of the Milky Way in a coordinate diagram.
The Fifth Catalogue of Nearby Stars (CNS5) aims to provide the most
volume-complete sample of stars in the solar neighbourhood. The CNS5
is compiled based on trigonometric parallaxes from Gaia EDR3 and
Hipparcos, and supplemented with astrometric data from Spitzer and
ground-based surveys carried out in the infrared. The CNS5 catalogue
is statistically complete down to 19.7 mag in G-band and 11.8 mag in
W1-band absolute magnitudes, corresponding to a spectral type of L8.
Continuous updates of observational data for nearby stars from all
sources were collected and evaluated. For all known stars in the 25 pc
sphere around the Sun, the best values of positions in space,
velocities, and magnitudes in different filters are presented.