- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/552/A16
- Title:
- Limb-darkening for CoRoT, Kepler, Spitzer. II.
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/552/A16
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present an extension of our investigations on limb-darkening coefficients computed with spherical symmetrical PHOENIX models. The models investigated in this paper cover the range 5000K<=Teff<=10000K and complete our previous studies of low effective temperatures computed with the same code. The limb-darkening coefficients are computed for the transmission curves of the Kepler, CoRoT, and Spitzer space missions and the Stroemgren, Johnson-Cousins, Sloan, and 2MASS passbands. These computations were performed by adopting the least-squares method. We have used six laws to describe the specific intensity distribution: linear, quadratic, square root, logarithmic, exponential, and a general law with four terms. The computations are presented for the solar chemical composition and cover the range 3.0<=logg<=5.5. The adopted microturbulent velocity and the mixing-length parameter are 2.0km/s and 2.0.
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- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/VI/154
- Title:
- Limb-darkening for Space Mission GAIA
- Short Name:
- VI/154
- Date:
- 22 Feb 2022
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- In the past few years, the number of space missions with astrophysical purposes has increased, with COROT, KEPLER, MOST and more recently TESS. Two of the most important complementary tools for these missions are the gravity and limb-darkening coefficients, hereafter GDC and LDC. For the missions mentioned above, many calculations are available to be used in several branches of stellar physics: synthetic light curves of eclipsing binaries and planetary transits, stellar diameters, line profiles in rotating stars, etc. see Claret & Bloemen (2011, Cat. J/A+A/529/A75), Claret et al. (2014, Cat. J/A+A/567/A3), Claret (2017, Cat. J/A+A/600/A30) and Claret (2018, Cat. J/A+A/618/A20). However, as noted by Zhou et al. (2018, AJ, submitted), these coefficients are not available for the GAIA mission. The main objective of this Research Note is to provide the theoretical calculations of the LDC and GDC for GAIA. We use two stellar atmosphere models: ATLAS (plane-parallel) and PHOENIX with spherical symmetry (Husser et al. 2013). The specific intensity distribution was fitted using five approaches: linear, quadratic, square root, logarithmic, and a more general one with four terms. These grids cover 19 metallicities ranging from 10^-5^ up to 10^+1^ solar abundances, 0<=logg<=6.0 and 1500K<=Teff<=50000K. The calculations of the gravity-darkening coefficients were performed for all plane-parallel ATLAS models. https://doi.org/10.3847/2515-5172/aaffdf
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/618/A20
- Title:
- Limb-darkening for TESS, Kepler, Corot, MOST
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/618/A20
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- One of the biggest problems we can encounter while dealing with the limb-darkening coefficients for stellar atmospheric models with spherical symmetry is the difficulty of adjusting both the limb and the central parts simultaneously. In particular, the regions near the drop-offs are not well reproduced for most models, depending on Teff, log g, or wavelength. Even if the law with four terms is used, these disagreements still persist. Here we introduce a new method that considerably improves the description of both the limb and the central parts and that will allow users to test models of stellar atmospheres with spherical symmetry more accurately in environments such as exoplanetary transits, eclipsing binaries, etc.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/600/A30
- Title:
- Limb-darkening for TESS satellite
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/600/A30
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present new gravity and limb-darkening coefficients for a wide range of effective temperatures, gravities, metallicities, and microturbulent velocities. These coefficients can be used in many different fields of stellar physics as synthetic light curves of eclipsing binaries and planetary transits, stellar diameters, line profiles in rotating stars, and others.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/AJ/146/21
- Title:
- LINEAR. II. Catalog of RR Lyrae stars
- Short Name:
- J/AJ/146/21
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present a sample of ~5000 RR Lyrae stars selected from the recalibrated LINEAR data set and detected at heliocentric distances between 5kpc and 30kpc over ~8000 deg^2^ of sky. The coordinates and light curve properties, such as period and Oosterhoff type, are made publicly available. We analyze in detail the light curve properties and Galactic distribution of the subset of ~4000 type ab RR Lyrae (RRab) stars, including a search for new halo substructures and the number density distribution as a function of Oosterhoff type. We find evidence for the Oosterhoff dichotomy among field RR Lyrae stars, with the ratio of the type II and I subsamples of about 1:4, but with a weaker separation than for globular cluster stars. The wide sky coverage and depth of this sample allow unique constraints for the number density distribution of halo RRab stars as a function of galactocentric distance: it can be described as an oblate ellipsoid with an axis ratio q=0.63 and with either a single or a double power law with a power-law index in the range -2 to -3. Consistent with previous studies, we find that the Oosterhoff type II subsample has a steeper number density profile than the Oosterhoff type I subsample. Using the group-finding algorithm EnLink, we detected seven candidate halo groups, only one of which is statistically spurious. Three of these groups are near globular clusters (M53/NGC 5053, M3, M13), and one is near a known halo substructure (Virgo Stellar Stream); the remaining three groups do not seem to be near any known halo substructures or globular clusters and seem to have a higher ratio of Oosterhoff type II to Oosterhoff type I RRab stars than what is found in the halo. The extended morphology and the position (outside the tidal radius) of some of the groups near globular clusters are suggestive of tidal streams possibly originating from globular clusters. Spectroscopic follow-up of detected halo groups is encouraged.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/AJ/146/101
- Title:
- LINEAR. III. Catalog of periodic variables
- Short Name:
- J/AJ/146/101
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We describe the construction of a highly reliable sample of ~7000 optically faint periodic variable stars with light curves obtained by the asteroid survey LINEAR across 10000deg^2^ of the northern sky. The majority of these variables have not been cataloged yet. The sample flux limit is several magnitudes fainter than most other wide-angle surveys; the photometric errors range from ~0.03mag at r=15 to ~0.20mag at r=18. Light curves include on average 250 data points, collected over about a decade. Using Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) based photometric recalibration of the LINEAR data for about 25 million objects, we selected ~200000 most probable candidate variables with r<17 and visually confirmed and classified ~7000 periodic variables using phased light curves. The reliability and uniformity of visual classification across eight human classifiers was calibrated and tested using a catalog of variable stars from the SDSS Stripe 82 region and verified using an unsupervised machine learning approach. The resulting sample of periodic LINEAR variables is dominated by 3900 RR Lyrae stars and 2700 eclipsing binary stars of all subtypes and includes small fractions of relatively rare populations such as asymptotic giant branch stars and SX Phoenicis stars. We discuss the distribution of these mostly uncataloged variables in various diagrams constructed with optical-to-infrared SDSS, Two Micron All Sky Survey, and Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer photometry, and with LINEAR light-curve features. We find that the combination of light-curve features and colors enables classification schemes much more powerful than when colors or light curves are each used separately. An interesting side result is a robust and precise quantitative description of a strong correlation between the light-curve period and color/spectral type for close and contact eclipsing binary stars ({beta} Lyrae and W UMa): as the color-based spectral type varies from K4 to F5, the median period increases from 5.9hr to 8.8hr. These large samples of robustly classified variable stars will enable detailed statistical studies of the Galactic structure and physics of binary and other stars and we make these samples publicly available.
- 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/450/4301
- Title:
- Line list for red giants in open clusters
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/450/4301
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We have observed high-dispersion echelle spectra of red giant members in the five open clusters (OCs) NGC 1342, NGC 1662, NGC 1912, NGC 2354 and NGC 2447 and determined their radial velocities and chemical compositions. These are the first chemical abundance measurements for all but NGC 2447. We combined our clusters from this and previous papers with a sample drawn from the literature for which we remeasured the chemical abundances to establish a common abundance scale. With this homogeneous sample of OCs, we study the relative elemental abundances of stars in OCs in comparison with field stars as a function of age and metallicity. We find a range of mild enrichment of heavy (Ba-Eu) elements in young OC giants over field stars of the same metallicity. Our analysis supports that the youngest stellar generations in cluster might be underrepresented by the solar neighbourhood field stars.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/657/A70
- Title:
- Linking high- and low-mass star formation
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/657/A70
- Date:
- 21 Mar 2022 09:28:51
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- Astronomers have yet to establish whether high-mass protostars form from high-mass prestellar cores, similar to their lower-mass counterparts, or from lower-mass fragments at the heart of a pre-protostellar cluster undergoing large-scale collapse. Part of the uncertainty is due to a shortage of envelope structure data on protostars of a few tens of solar masses, where we expect to see a transition from intermediate-mass star formation to the high-mass process. We sought to derive the masses, luminosities, and envelope density profiles for eight sources in Cygnus-X, whose mass estimates in the literature placed them in the sampling gap. Combining these sources with similarly evolved sources in the literature enabled us to perform a meta-analysis of protostellar envelope parameters over six decades in source luminosity. We performed spectral energy distribution (SED) fitting on archival broadband photometric continuum data from 1.2 to 850 microns, to derive bolometric luminosities for our eight sources plus initial mass and radius estimates for modelling density and temperature profiles with the radiative transfer package Transphere. The envelope masses, densities at 1000AU, outer envelope radii, and density power law indices as functions of bolometric luminosity all follow established trends in the literature spanning six decades in luminosity. Most of our sources occupy an intermediate to moderately high range of masses and luminosities, which helps more firmly establish the continuity between low- and high-mass star formation mechanisms. Our density power law indices are consistent with observed values in literature, which show no discernible trends with luminosity. Finally, we show that the trends in all of the envelope parameters for high-mass protostars are statistically indistinguishable from trends in the same variables for low- and intermediate-mass protostars.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJS/219/18
- Title:
- LIRAS: LoCuSS IR AGN survey
- Short Name:
- J/ApJS/219/18
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present a sample of 290 24{mu}m-selected active galactic nuclei (AGNs) mostly at z~0.3-2.5, within 5.2{deg}^2^ distributed as 25'x25' fields around each of 30 galaxy clusters in the Local Cluster Substructure Survey. The sample is nearly complete to 1mJy at 24{mu}m, and has a rich multiwavelength set of ancillary data; 162 are detected by Herschel. We use spectral templates for AGNs, stellar populations, and infrared (IR) emission by star-forming galaxies to decompose the spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of these AGNs and their host galaxies, and estimate their star formation rates, AGN luminosities, and host galaxy stellar masses. The set of templates is relatively simple: a standard Type-1 quasar template; another for the photospheric output of the stellar population; and a far-infrared star-forming template. For the Type-2 AGN SEDs, we substitute templates including internal obscuration, and some Type-1 objects require a warm component (T>~50K). The individually Herschel-detected Type-1 AGNs and a subset of 17 Type-2 AGNs typically have luminosities >10^45^erg/s, and supermassive black holes of ~3x10^8^M_{sun}_ emitting at ~10% of the Eddington rate. We find them in about twice the numbers of AGNs identified in SDSS data in the same fields, i.e., they represent typical high-luminosity AGNs, not an IR-selected minority. These AGNs and their host galaxies are studied further in an accompanying paper.