- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/388/500
- Title:
- GHASP: H{alpha} data cubes for 108 galaxies
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/388/500
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present the Fabry-Perot observations obtained for a new set of 108 galaxies in the frame of the Gassendi H{alpha} survey of SPirals (GHASP). The GHASP survey consists of 3D H{alpha} data cubes for 203 spiral and irregular galaxies, covering a large range in morphological types and absolute magnitudes, for kinematics analysis. The new set of data presented here completes the survey. The GHASP sample is by now the largest sample of Fabry-Perot data ever published. The analysis of the whole GHASP sample will be done in forthcoming papers. Using adaptive binning techniques based on Voronoi tessellations, we have derived H{alpha} data cubes from which are computed H{alpha} maps, radial velocity fields as well as residual velocity fields, position-velocity diagrams, rotation curves and the kinematical parameters for almost all galaxies.
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Search Results
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/390/466
- Title:
- GHASP: H{alpha} data cubes for 97 galaxies
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/390/466
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The Gassendi HAlpha survey of SPirals survey (GHASP) consists of 3D H{alpha} data cubes for 203 spiral and irregular galaxies, covering a large range in morphological types and absolute magnitudes, for kinematics analysis. It is the largest sample of Fabry-Perot data published up to now. In order to provide an homogenous sample, reduced and analysed using the same procedure, we present in this paper the new reduction and analysis for a set of 97 galaxies already published in previous papers but now using the new data reduction procedure adopted for the whole sample. The GHASP survey is now achieved and the whole sample is reduced using the adaptive binning techniques based on Voronoi tessellations. We have derived H{alpha} data cubes from which are computed H{alpha} maps, radial velocity fields as well as residual velocity fields, position-velocity diagrams, rotation curves and kinematical parameters for almost all galaxies. The rotation curves, the kinematical parameters and their uncertainties are computed homogeneously using the new method based on the power spectrum of the residual velocity field. This paper provides the kinematical parameters for the whole sample. For the first time, the integrated H{alpha} profiles have been computed and are presented for the whole sample. The total H{alpha} fluxes deduced from these profiles have been used in order to provide a flux calibration for the 203 GHASP galaxies. This paper confirms the conclusions already drawn from half the sample concerning (i) the increased accuracy of position angles measurements using kinematical data, (ii) the difficulty to have robust determinations of both morphological and kinematical inclinations in particular for low-inclination galaxies and (iii) the very good agreement between the Tully-Fisher relationship derived from our data and previous determinations found in the literature.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/401/2113
- Title:
- GHASP: H{alpha} data cubes for 153 galaxies
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/401/2113
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- Due to their large distances, high-redshift galaxies are observed at a very low spatial resolution. In order to disentangle the evolution of galaxy kinematics from low-resolution effects, we have used Fabry-Perot 3D H{alpha} data cubes of 153 nearby isolated galaxies selected from the Gassendi H{alpha} survey of SPirals (GHASP) to simulate data cubes of galaxies at redshift z=1.7 using a pixel size of 0.125" and a 0.5" seeing. We have derived H{alpha} flux, velocity and velocity dispersion maps.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/AJ/80/771
- Title:
- 5-GHz Survey of Bright Galaxies
- Short Name:
- J/AJ/80/771
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The 1135 galaxies in the Reference Catalogue of Bright Galaxies (Cat. <VII/16>) with declinations between +10{deg} and +70{deg} were surveyed at 6-cm wavelength with a 3-sigma detection limit of about 30mf.u.; of these 149 were detected. For 90 of these galaxies, spectral indices were obtained. There is a suggestion that the elliptical galaxies have flat spectra more often than the spiral galaxies.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJS/133/1
- Title:
- GIS catalog project : source catalog
- Short Name:
- J/ApJS/133/1
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present the first X-ray source catalog of the ASCA Medium Sensitivity Survey (AMSS, or the GIS catalog project), constructed from data at Galactic latitudes |b|>10{deg} observed between 1993 May and 1996 December. The catalog utilizes 368 combined fields and contains 1343 sources with the detection significance above 5{sigma} either in the survey bands of 0.7-7keV, 2-10keV, or 0.7-2keV, including target sources. For each source, the ASCA source name, position, a 90% error radius, count rates in the three bands, detection significances, fluxes, and a hardness ratio are provided. With extensive simulations, we carefully evaluate the data quality of the catalog. Results from cross-correlation with other existing catalogs are briefly summarized.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJS/161/185
- Title:
- GIS catalog project : source catalog II
- Short Name:
- J/ApJS/161/185
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- In succession to the first ASCA Medium Sensitivity Survey catalog (AMSS-I), we present the second X-ray source catalog (AMSS-II), constructed from the Gas Imaging Spectrometer (GIS) data covering Galactic latitudes |b|>10{deg} observed between 1997 January and 2000 May. The AMSS-II catalog uses 306 fields and contains a total of 1190 sources detected with significance of >5{sigma} in either the 0.7-7, 2-10, or 0.7-2keV band. The AMSS-I and AMSS-II catalogs list a total of 2533 sources from an area of 278{deg}^2^ and provides a unique database of X-ray sources in the flux range of 10^-13^-10^-11^ergs/cm^2^/s (0.7-10keV). We summarize statistical properties of a complete X-ray sample consisting of 1969 serendipitous selected from AMSS-I and AMSS-II.
327. GLADE catalog
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/VII/275
- Title:
- GLADE catalog
- Short Name:
- VII/275
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We are introducing a value-added full-sky galaxy catalog with high completeness for identifying gravitational wave (GW) sources in order to support future electromagnetic (EM) follow-up projects of the LIGO/Virgo Collaboration. The catalog GLADE (Galaxy List for the Advanced Detector Era) has been constructed (combined and matched) from four existing galaxy catalogs: GWGC, 2MPZ, 2MASS XSC and HyperLEDA. It contains 1918147 galaxies, which is two orders of magnitude greater than the number of galaxies in the GWGC catalog alone (53312), which is currently in use by the collaboration. Furthermore we considered it as a crucial requirement towards the catalog to contain B-band magnitudes and distances for all entries. Therefore we have associated these properties for 548876 2MASS galaxies which lacked them with a regression algorithm teached on a subsample of the 2MPZ catalog. Our catalog is complete to 73Mpc and even at 300Mpc has a relatively high completeness (53%). Naturally, our catalog could be used in a broad range of various astrophysical projects besides EM follow-up efforts.We are introducing a value-added full-sky galaxy catalog with high completeness for identifying gravitational wave (GW) sources in order to support future electromagnetic (EM) follow-up projects of the LIGO/Virgo Collaboration. The catalog has been constructed (combined and matched) from four existing galaxy catalogs: GWGC, 2MPZ, 2MASS XSC and HyperLEDA. It contains 1918147 galaxies, which is two orders of magnitude greater than the number of galaxies in the GWGC catalog alone (53312), which is currently in use by the collaboration. Furthermore we considered it as a crucial requirement towards the catalog to contain B-band magnitudes and distances for all entries. Therefore we have associated these properties for 548,876 2MASS galaxies which lacked them with a regression algorithm teached on a subsample of the 2MPZ catalog. Our catalog is complete to 73 Mpc and even at 300 Mpc has a relatively high completeness (53%). Naturally, our catalog could be used in a broad range of various astrophysical projects besides EM follow-up efforts. For a brief overview of the GLADE project, check out the talk slides (http://aquarius.elte.hu/glade/GLADE_GDalya_LVC2015September.pdf) presented at the 2015 September LIGO-Virgo Collaboration Meeting in Budapest, Hungary. If you have any questions or suggestions about the catalog, please send us an email: dalyag@caesar.elte.hu
328. GLADE v2.3 catalog
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/VII/281
- Title:
- GLADE v2.3 catalog
- Short Name:
- VII/281
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We introduce a value-added full-sky catalogue of galaxies, named as Galaxy List for the Advanced Detector Era, or GLADE. The purpose of this catalogue is to (i) help identifications of host candidates for gravitational-wave events, (ii) support target selections for electromagnetic follow-up observations of gravitational-wave candidates, (iii) provide input data on the matter distribution of the local Universe for astrophysical or cosmological simulations, and (iv) help identifications of host candidates for poorly localized electromagnetic transients, such as gamma-ray bursts observed with the InterPlanetary Network. Both being potential hosts of astrophysical sources of gravitational waves, GLADE includes inactive and active galaxies as well. GLADE was constructed by cross-matching and combining data from five separate (but not independent) astronomical catalogues: GWGC, 2MPZ, 2MASS XSC, HyperLEDA, and SDSS-DR12Q. GLADE is complete up to d_L_=37^+3^_-4_Mpc in terms of the cumulative B-band luminosity of galaxies within luminosity distance dL, and contains all of the brightest galaxies giving half of the total B-band luminosity up to d_L_=91Mpc. As B-band luminosity is expected to be a tracer of binary neutron star mergers (currently the prime targets of joint GW+EM detections), our completeness measures can be used as estimations of completeness for containing all binary neutron star merger hosts in the local Universe.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/VIII/102
- Title:
- GLEAM II. Galactic plane
- Short Name:
- VIII/102
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- This work makes available a further of the GaLactic and Extragalactic All-sky Murchison Widefield Array (GLEAM) survey, covering half of the accessible galactic plane, across 20 frequency bands sampling 72-231MHz, with resolution 4-2arcmin. Unlike previous GLEAM data releases, we used multi-scale CLEAN to better deconvolve large-scale galactic structure. For the galactic longitude ranges 345{deg}<l<67{deg}, 180{deg}<l<240{deg}, we provide a compact source catalogue of 22037 components selected from a 60-MHz bandwidth image centred at 200MHz, with RMS noise ~-10-20mJy/beam and position accuracy better than 2-arcsec. The catalogue has a completeness of 50% at ~120mJy, and a reliability of 99.86%. It covers galactic latitudes 1{deg}<=|b|<=10{deg} towards the galactic centre and |b|<=10{deg} for other regions, and is available from Vizier; images covering |b|<=10{deg} for all longitudes are made available on the GLEAM Virtual Observatory (VO).server and SkyView.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/VIII/109
- Title:
- GLEAM III. South Galactic Pole
- Short Name:
- VIII/109
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present the South Galactic Pole (SGP) data release from the GaLactic and Extragalactic All-sky Murchison Widefield Array (GLEAM) survey. These data combine both years of GLEAM observations at 72-231MHz conducted with the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) and cover an area of 5,113 deg^2^ centred on the SGP at 20h40m<RA<05h04m and -48{deg}<Dec<-2{deg}. At 216MHz, the typical rms noise is ~5mJy/beam and the angular resolution ~2 arcmin. The source catalogue contains a total of 108851 components above 5{sigma}, of which 77 per cent have measured spectral indices between 72 and 231MHz. Improvements to the data reduction in this release include the use of the GLEAM Extragalactic catalogue as a sky model to calibrate the data, a more efficient and automated algorithm to deconvolve the snapshot images, and a more accurate primary beam model to correct the flux scale. This data release enables more sensitive large-scale studies of extragalactic source populations as well as spectral variability studies on a one-year timescale.