- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/AJ/143/129
- Title:
- Photometric and Spectroscopic observations of BF Dra
- Short Name:
- J/AJ/143/129
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- BF Dra is now known to be an eccentric double-lined F6+F6 binary star with relatively deep (0.7mag) partial eclipses. Previous studies of the system are improved with 7494 differential photometric observations from the URSA WebScope and 9700 from the NFO WebScope, 106 high-resolution spectroscopic observations from the Tennessee State University 2m automatic spectroscopic telescope and the 1m coude-feed spectrometer at Kitt Peak National Observatory, and 31 accurate radial velocities from the CfA. Very accurate (better than 0.6%) masses and radii are determined from analysis of the two new light curves and four radial velocity curves. Theoretical models match the absolute properties of the stars at an age of about 2.72Gyr and [Fe/H]=-0.17, and tidal theory correctly confirms that the orbit should still be eccentric. Our observations of BF Dra constrain the convective core overshooting parameter to be larger than about 0.13H_p_. We find, however, that standard tidal theory is unable to match the observed slow rotation rates of the components' surface layers.
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- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/506/999
- Title:
- Photometric Calibration of SNLS
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/506/999
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- This is the photometric calibration of the SuperNova Legacy Survey (SNLS) three year dataset. The SNLS corresponds to the DEEP component of the larger Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope Legacy Survey (CFHTLS). The SNLS repeatedly monitors four one square degree fields (labeled D[1-4]) with the MegaCam wide-field imager, in the g, r, i and z bands. u-band observations of the same fields are also available, although not formally part of the SNLS dataset. The non-uniformities of the MegaCam imager photometric response have been mapped as a function of the position on the focal plane. The fluxes, measured on the survey images processed with the CFHT Elixir pipeline, have been corrected for these non-uniformities in order to obtain measurements that are uniform at the ~1% level. The MegaCam passband transmissions were found to be non-uniform, the filters being 3 to 6 nanometers bluer on the edges of the camera than on the center. This result agrees with the filter scans provided by the filter manufacturer (Sagem/REOSC). This has important consequences on the definition of the MegaCam magnitudes: the natural magnitude system depends on the focal plane location where the observations were made. In order not to break the connection between calibrated magnitudes and their physical flux counterparts, we chose to report the *natural magnitudes* of each object, measured in the MegaCam passbands, at the focal plane location where the object was observed. We call this system, "Local Natural Magnitudes". The non-uniformities of the MegaCam effective passbands are small and, for main sequence stellar objects, they may be accounted for using linear color corrections. The relation between the Local Natural Magnitudes of a given star, observed at two locations x_0 and x of the focal plane are: g|x = g|x_0 + dk_g_gr(x) * ( (g-r)|x_0 - (g-r)BD+17|x_0 ) ... z|x = z|x_0 + dk_z_iz(x) * ( (i-z)|x_0 - (i-z)BD+17|x_0 ) where the dk(x) are (position dependant) color terms. We provide dk(x) maps for each MegaCam band (see below). The SNLS 3 year calibration relies on the (Landolt, 1992AJ....104..340) standard star catalog. Landolt fields are observed during each photometric night along with the SNLS fields. Zero-points are derived from these observations. Stable and isolated stars are detected on the SNLS fields and selected as "tertiary standards". The calibrated magnitudes of each tertiary standard obtained under photometric conditions are combined to produce a calibration catalog for each SNLS field. To interpret the tertiary standard magnitudes as physical fluxes, we need a primary standard, i.e. a star with known MegaCam magnitudes and whose spectral energy distribution has been measured absolutely. The SNLS uses BD+17 4708 whose SED has been measured in Bohlin & Gilliland, 2004, Cat. <J/AJ/128/3053> using the HST STIS and NICMOS spectrographs. BD+17 4708 has not been directly observed by SNLS, however, its MegaCam magnitudes were inferred from its known Landolt magnitudes (this paper, table 7). The tertiary star Local Natural Magnitudes are defined so that the associated physical broadband flux f|x is given by: f|x = 10^{-0.4*(m|x-m_ref_)}^*{int}[S_ref(l)_*T(l;x)]dl where m|x is the tertiary star magnitudes at location x on the focal plane, m_ref_ is the MegaCam magnitude of BD+17 4708 (at the center of the focal plane, see table 7 of this paper), S_ref(l)_ is the SED of BD+17 4708 measured in 2004AJ....128.3053B, and T(l;x) is the effective passband of MegaCam at location x. Attached is all the necessary information to tie MegaCam observations to this system. We provide (a) the griz magnitudes of the SNLS tertiary standards for all four SNLS fields (b) the MegaCam open transmission and the ugriz MegaCam filter scans at various position along a diagonal (c) the final uncertainty budget in the form of 3 covariance matrices. The u-band observations of the SNLS DEEP fields are not formally part of the SNLS. Nevetheless we give u-band magnitudes for a subset of the SNLS tertiary stars.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/742/3
- Title:
- Photometric catalogs for ECDF-S and CDF-N
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/742/3
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present an analysis of deep multiwavelength data for z~0.3-3 starburst galaxies selected by their 70um emission in the Extended-Chandra Deep Field-South and Extended Groth Strip. We identify active galactic nuclei (AGNs) in these infrared sources through their X-ray emission and quantify the fraction that host an AGN. Lastly, we investigate the ratio between the supermassive black hole accretion rate (inferred from the AGN X-ray luminosity) and the bulge growth rate of the host galaxy (approximated as the SFR) and find that, for sources with detected AGNs and star formation (and neglecting systems with low star formation rates to which our data are insensitive), this ratio in distant starbursts agrees well with that expected from the local scaling relation assuming the black holes and bulges grew at the same epoch. These results imply that black holes and bulges grow together during periods of vigorous star formation and AGN activity.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/477/845
- Title:
- Photometric catalogue of CALIFA galaxies
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/477/845
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present an extensive compendium of photometrically determined structural properties for all Calar Alto Legacy Integral Field spectroscopy Area (CALIFA)galaxies in the third data release (DR3). We exploit Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) images in order to extract one-dimensional (1D) gri surface brightness profiles for all CALIFA DR3 galaxies. We also derive a variety of non-parametric quantities and parametric models fitted to 1D i-band profiles. The galaxy images are decomposed using the 2D bulge-disc decomposition programs IMFIT and GALFIT. The relative performance and merit of our 1D and 2D modelling approaches are assessed. Where possible, we compare and augment our photometry with existing measurements from the literature. Close agreement is generally found with the studies of Walcher et al. (2014A&A...569A...1W) and Mendez-Abreu et al. (2017A&A...598A..32M, Cat. J/A+A/598/A32), though some significant differences exist. Various structural metrics are also highlighted on account of their tight dispersion against an independent variable, such as the circular velocity.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/419/80
- Title:
- Photometric Classification Catalogue of SDSS DR7
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/419/80
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present a catalogue of about six million unresolved photometric detections in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Seventh Data Release, classifying them into stars, galaxies and quasars. We use a machine learning classifier trained on a subset of spectroscopically confirmed objects from 14th to 22nd magnitude in the SDSS i band. Our catalogue consists of 2430625 quasars, 3544036 stars and 63586 unresolved galaxies from 14th to 24th magnitude in the SDSS i-band. Our algorithm recovers 99.96 per cent of spectroscopically confirmed quasars and 99.51 per cent of stars to i~21.3 in the colour window that we study. The level of contamination due to data artefacts for objects beyond i=21.3 is highly uncertain and all mention of completeness and contamination in the paper are valid only for objects brighter than this magnitude. However, a comparison of the predicted number of quasars with the theoretical number counts shows reasonable agreement.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/584/A44
- Title:
- Photometric classification of QSO from RCS-2
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/584/A44
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present new quasar candidate catalogs from the Red-Sequence Cluster Survey 2 (RCS-2), identified solely from photometric information using a Random Forest algorithm. The algorithm is trained using a well-defined SDSS spectroscopic sample of quasars and stars. The algorithm identifies putative quasars from broadband magnitudes (g, r, i, z) and colors. Exploiting NUV GALEX measurements for a subset of the objects, we refine the classifier by adding new information. An additional subset of the data with WISE W1 and W2 bands is also studied. Upon analyzing 542,897 RCS-2 point sources, the algorithm identified 21,501 quasar candidates, with a training-set-derived precision of 89.5% and recall of 88.4%. These performance metrics improve for the GALEX subset; 6530 quasar candidates are identified from 16898 sources, with a precision and recall respectively of 97.0% and 97.5%. Algorithm performance is further improved when WISE data are included, with precision and recall increasing to 99.3% and 99.1% respectively for 21834 quasar candidates from 242902 sources. After merging these samples and removing duplicates, we obtain 38257 candidates.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/453/3649
- Title:
- Photometric data for ASASSN-15ed
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/453/3649
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present the results of the spectroscopic and photometric monitoring campaign of ASASSN-15ed. The transient was discovered quite young by the All Sky Automated Survey for SuperNovae (ASAS-SN) survey. Amateur astronomers allowed us to sample the photometric SN evolution around maximum light, which we estimate to have occurred on JD=2457087.4+/-0.6 in the r band. Its apparent r-band magnitude at maximum was r=16.91+/-0.10, providing an absolute magnitude M_r_~-20.04+/-0.20, which is slightly more luminous than the typical magnitudes estimated for Type Ibn SNe. The post-peak evolution was well monitored, and the decline rate (being in most bands around 0.1 mag/d during the first 25 d after maximum) is marginally slower than the average decline rates of SNe Ibn during the same time interval. The object was initially classified as a Type Ibn SN because early-time spectra were characterized by a blue continuum with superimposed narrow P-Cygni lines of HeI, suggesting the presence of a slowly moving (1200-1500 km/s), He-rich circumstellar medium. Later on, broad P-Cygni HeI lines became prominent. The inferred velocities, as measured from the minimum of the broad absorption components, were between 6000 and 7000 km/s. As we attribute these broad features to the SN ejecta, this is the first time we have observed the transition of a Type Ibn SN to a Type Ib SN.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/787/163
- Title:
- Photometric data for SN 2009ip
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/787/163
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present time series photometric and spectroscopic data for the transient SN 2009ip from the start of its outburst in 2012 September until 2013 November. These data were collected primarily with the new robotic capabilities of the Las Cumbres Observatory Global Telescope Network, a specialized facility for time domain astrophysics, and includes supporting high-resolution spectroscopy from the Southern Astrophysical Research Telescope, Kitt Peak National Observatory, and Gemini Observatory. Based on our nightly photometric monitoring, we interpret the strength and timing of fluctuations in the light curve as interactions between fast-moving ejecta and an inhomogeneous circumstellar material (CSM) produced by past eruptions of this massive luminous blue variable (LBV) star. Our time series of spectroscopy in 2012 reveals that, as the continuum and narrow H{alpha} flux from CSM interactions declines, the broad component of H{alpha} persists with supernova (SN)-like velocities that are not typically seen in LBVs or SN impostor events. At late times, we find that SN 2009ip continues to decline slowly, at <~0.01 mag/day, with small fluctuations in slope similar to Type IIn supernovae (SNe IIn) or SN impostors but no further LBV-like activity. The late-time spectrum features broad calcium lines similar to both late-time SNe and SN impostors. In general, we find that the photometric and spectroscopic evolution of SN 2009ip is more similar to SNe IIn than either continued eruptions of an LBV star or SN impostors but we cannot rule out a nonterminal explosion. In this context, we discuss the implications for episodic mass loss during the late stages of massive star evolution.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/AJ/158/193
- Title:
- Photometric data of V582 Lyr and V1016 Oph
- Short Name:
- J/AJ/158/193
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present new CCD photometric light curves about two eclipsing binaries of V582 Lyr and V1016 Oph. Our observations were carried out by the SARA 91.4 cm telescope of America in 2016 and the 60 cm telescope of Chile in 2018. V582 Lyr's spectra type was classified as K5, and its radial velocity was determined using the LAMOST spectral survey. There are absorptions in the observed H{alpha} line and excess emissions in the subtracted H{alpha} line, which show weak chromospheric activity. We obtained the updated ephemeris information for V582 Lr and V1016 Oph, and found that their orbital periods are both decreasing. We concluded that the decreased rate is -0.474 (+/-0.011)x10^-7^ days/yr for V582 Lyr and 3.460 (+/-0.014)x10^-7^ days/yr for V1016 Oph. For V582 Lyr, the period variation was interpreted as a mass transfer from the secondary component to the primary one, and the corresponding rate is dM_2_/dt=-1.10 (+/-0.03)x10^-7^ M_{sun}_/yr. For V1016 Oph, we explain it by transferring from the primary component to the secondary one, and the corresponding rate is dM_1_/dt=-2.69 (+/-0.04)x10^-7^ M_{sun}_/yr. The photometric solution of V1016 Oph was obtained by analyzing the CCD photometry with the Wilson-Devinney program. We also obtained the orbital parameters of V1016 Oph by simultaneously analyzing our BVRI light curves and radial-velocity curve from the LAMOST low-resolution spectral survey. Finally, our orbital solution shows that they are contact eclipsing binaries with contact factors of 3.35 (+/-0.08)% for V582 Lyr and 41.0 (+/-0.1)% for V1016 Oph.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/694/1559
- Title:
- Photometric follow-up observations of GJ 436b
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/694/1559
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- This paper presents multiband photometric follow-up observations of the Neptune-mass transiting planet GJ 436b, consisting of five new ground-based transit light curves obtained in 2007 May. Together with one already published light curve, we have at hand a total of six light curves, spanning 29 days. The analysis of the data yields an orbital period P=2.64386+/-0.00003 days, midtransit time T_c_[HJD]=2454235.8355+/-0.0001, planet mass M_p_=23.1+/-0.9M_{earth}_=0.073+/-0.003M_Jup_, planet radius R_p_=4.2+/-0.2R_{earth}_=0.37+/-0.01R_Jup_, and stellar radius R_s_=0.45+/-0.02R_{sun}_. Our typical precision for the midtransit timing for each transit is about 30s. We searched the data for a possible signature of a second planet in the system through transit timing variations (TTV) and variation of the impact parameter. The analysis could not rule out a small, of the order of a minute, TTV and a long-term modulation of the impact parameter, of the order of +0.2yr^-1^.