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- ID:
- ivo://jvo/isas/akari_dr1
- Title:
- AKARI Point Source Catalogues Public Release 1
- Short Name:
- AKARI_DR1
- Date:
- 08 Jan 2023 14:49:11
- Publisher:
- JVO
- Description:
- Akari is Japan's first dedicated infrared astronomical satellite (and the second infrared space mission following IRTS) launched on February 22, 2006. Akari's primary mission is to carry out the all-sky survey with the best sensitivity, spatial resolution and the widest wavelengths. The AKARI/FIS Bright Source Catalogue Version 1.0 provides the positions and fluxes of 427,071 point sources in the four far-infrared wavelengths centred at 65, 90, 140, and 160 um. The sensitivity in the 90 um band is about 0.55 Jy. The AKARI/IRC Point Source Catalogue Version 1.0 provides positions and fluxes of 870,973 sources (844,649 sources in 9um band and 194,551 sources in 18um band) in the Mid-Infrared wavelengths.
- ID:
- ivo://leibniz-kis/__system__/services/registry
- Title:
- KIS Science Data Centre Registry
- Short Name:
- KIS VO SDC RG
- Date:
- 06 Dec 2022 08:42:46
- Publisher:
- The staff at the KIS Science Data Centre
- Description:
- The publishing registry for the KIS Science Data Centre.
- ID:
- ivo://jvo/isas/darts/akari/AKARI-IRC_Spectrum_Pointed_SlitlessMIR_psc_1.0
- Title:
- AKARI/IRC MIR-S slit-less 9um point source catalogue
- Short Name:
- AKARI_IRC_SPEC_PSC_V1
- Date:
- 23 Aug 2022 05:23:32
- Publisher:
- JVO
- Description:
- This is a 9 um point source catalogue generated as a by-product of the "AKARI/IRC MIR-S slit-less spectroscopic catalogue". The point source catalogue contains 42,387 sources brighter than 0.3 mJy.
- ID:
- ivo://jvo/isas/darts/akari/AKARI-IRC_Catalogue_AllSky_ASTFLUX_1.0
- Title:
- AKARI Asteroid Flux Catalogue Version 1
- Short Name:
- AKARI_ASTEROID_V1
- Date:
- 23 Aug 2022 05:22:33
- Publisher:
- JVO
- Description:
- The AKARI Asteroid Flux Catalog contains photometric data of 5201 asteroids observed with the Infrared Camera (IRC) on board the Japanese infrared astronomical satellite AKARI. The catalog objects comprise the near-Earth asteroids, the main belt asteroids, the Cybeles, the Hildas, and the Jovian Trojan asteroids. The observations were performed by the all-sky survey in 9 or 18 micron bands as well as the slow-scan observations in 9 or 18 micron bands, and the pointed observations in 4, 7, 11, 15, and/or 24 micron bands.
- ID:
- ivo://latmos.ipsl/__system__/services/registry
- Title:
- LATMOS DaCHS server Registry
- Short Name:
- LATMOS RG
- Date:
- 02 May 2022 13:52:13
- Publisher:
- The staff at the LATMOS DaCHS server
- Description:
- The publishing registry for the LATMOS DaCHS server.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/659/A188
- Title:
- 4XMM-DR9-HECATE-based ULX catalogue
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/659/A188
- Date:
- 25 Mar 2022 09:09:32
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- Ultraluminous X-ray sources (LX>1x10^39^erg/s, ULXs) are excellent probes for extreme accretion physics, star formation history in galaxies, and intermediate-mass black holes searches. As the sample size of X-ray data from modern observatories such as XMM-Newton and Chandra increases, producing extensive catalogues of ULXs and studying their collective properties has become both a possibility and a priority. Our aim is to build a clean updated ULX catalogue based on one of the most recent XMM-Newton X-ray serendipitous survey data releases, 4XMM-DR9, and the most recent and exhaustive catalogue of nearby galaxies, HECATE. We performed a preliminary population study to test if the properties of the expanded XMM-Newton ULX population are consistent with previous findings. We performed positional cross-matches between XMM-Newton sources and HECATE objects to identify host galaxies, and we used distance and luminosity arguments to identify ULX candidates. We flagged interlopers by finding known counterparts in external catalogues and databases such as Gaia DR2 SSDS, Pan-STARRS1, the NASA/IPAC Extragalactic Database, and SIMBAD. Source, galaxy and variability parameters from 4XMM-DR9, HECATE, and 4XMM-DR9s were used to study the spectral, abundances and variability properties of the ULX sample. We identify 779 ULX candidates, 94 of which hold LX>5x10^40^erg/s. Spiral galaxies are more likely to host ULXs. For early spiral galaxies the number of ULX candidates per star-forming rate is consistent with previous studies, while a significant ULX population in elliptical and lenticular galaxies also exists. Candidates hosted by late-type galaxies tend to present harder spectra and to undergo more extreme inter-observation variability than those hosted by early-type galaxies. Approximately 30 candidates with LX>1x10^41^erg/s are also identified, constituting the most interesting candidates for intermediate-mass black hole searches. We have built the largest ULX catalogue to date. Our results on the spectral and abundance properties of ULXs confirm the findings made by previous studies based on XMM-Newton and Chandra data, while our population-scale study on variability properties is unprecedented. Our study, however, provides limited insight into the properties of the brightest ULX candidates due to the small sample size. The expected growth of X-ray catalogues and potential future follow-ups will aid in drawing a clearer picture.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/659/A183
- Title:
- MUSE-Wide+MUSE-Deep EWs of Lyman{alpha} emitters
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/659/A183
- Date:
- 25 Mar 2022 09:08:03
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The hydrogen Lyman{alpha} line is often the only measurable feature in optical spectra of high-redshift galaxies. Its shape and strength are influenced by radiative transfer processes and the properties of the underlying stellar population. High equivalent widths of several hundred {AA} are especially hard to explain by models and could point towards unusual stellar populations, for example with low metallicities, young stellar ages, and a top-heavy initial mass function. Other aspects influencing equivalent widths are the morphology of the galaxy and its gas properties. The aim of this study is to better understand the connection between the Lyman{alpha} rest-frame equivalent width (EW0) and spectral properties as well as ultraviolet (UV) continuum morphology by obtaining reliable EW0 histograms for a statistical sample of galaxies and by assessing the fraction of objects with large equivalent widths. We used integral field spectroscopy from the Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) combined with broad-band data from the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) to measure EW0 . We analysed the emission lines of 1920 Lyman{alpha} emitters (LAEs) detected in the full MUSE-Wide (one hour exposure time) and MUSE-Deep (ten hour exposure time) surveys and found UV continuum counterparts in archival HST data. We fitted the UV continuum photometric images using the Galfit software to gain morphological information on the rest-UV emission and fitted the spectra obtained from MUSE to determine the double peak fraction, asymmetry, full-width at half maximum, and flux of the Lyman{alpha} line. The two surveys show different histograms of Lyman{alpha} EW0 . In MUSE-Wide, 20% of objects have EW0>240{AA}, while this fraction is only 11% in MUSE-Deep and ~=16% for the full sample. This includes objects without HST continuum counterparts (one-third of our sample), for which we give lower limits for EW0. The object with the highest securely measured EW0 has EW0=589+/-193{AA} (the highest lower limit being EW0=4464{AA}). We investigate the connection between EW0 and Lyman{alpha} spectral or UV continuum morphological properties. The survey depth has to be taken into account when studying EW0 distributions. We find that in general, high EW0 objects can have a wide range of spectral and UV morphological properties, which might reflect that the underlying causes for high EW0 values are equally varied.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/659/A181
- Title:
- J-PLUS DR1 stellar param, and abundances
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/659/A181
- Date:
- 25 Mar 2022 09:03:05
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The Javalambre Photometric Local Universe Survey (J-PLUS) has obtained precise photometry in twelve specially designed filters for large numbers of Galactic stars. Deriving their precise stellar atmospheric parameters and individual elemental abundances is crucial for studies of Galactic structure, and the assembly history and chemical evolution of our Galaxy. Our goal is to estimate not only stellar parameters (effective temperature, Teff, surface gravity, logg, and metallicity, [Fe/H]), but also [{alpha}/Fe] and four elemental abundances ([C/Fe], [N/Fe], [Mg/Fe], and [Ca/Fe]) using data from J-PLUS DR1. By combining recalibrated photometric data from J-PLUS DR1, Gaia DR2, and spectroscopic labels from LAMOST, we design and train a set of cost-sensitive neural networks, the CSNet, to learn the non-linear mapping from stellar colors to their labels. We have achieved precisions of {delta}Teff~55K, {delta}logg~0.15dex, and {delta}[Fe/H]~0.07dex, respectively, over a wide range of temperature, surface gravity, and metallicity. The uncertainties of the abundance estimates for [{alpha}/Fe] and the four individual elements are in the range 0.04-0.08 dex. We compare our parameter and abundance estimates with those from other spectroscopic catalogs such as APOGEE and GALAH, and find an overall good agreement. Conclusions. Our results demonstrate the potential of well-designed, high-quality photometric data for determinations of stellar parameters as well as individual elemental abundances. Applying the method to J-PLUS DR1, we have obtained the aforementioned parameters for about two million stars, providing an outstanding data set for chemo-dynamic analyses of the Milky Way.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/AJ/162/267
- Title:
- I-band light curve of OGLE-2019-BLG-1058 with KMTNet
- Short Name:
- J/AJ/162/267
- Date:
- 25 Mar 2022 06:06:33
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We show that because the conditions for producing terrestrial microlens parallax (TPRX; i.e., a nearby disk lens) will also tend to produce a large lens-source relative proper motion ({mu}rel), source proper motion ({mu}S) measurements in general provide a strong test of TPRX signals, which Gould & Yee (2013) showed were an important probe of free-floating planet (FFP) candidates. As a case study, we report a single-lens/single-source microlensing event designated as OGLE-2019-BLG-1058. For this event, the short timescale (~2.5days) and very fast {mu}rel (~17.6mas/yr) suggest that this isolated lens is an FFP candidate located in the disk of our Galaxy. For this event, we find a TPRX signal consistent with a disk FFP, but at low significance. A direct measurement of the {mu}S shows that the large {mu}rel is due to an extreme {mu}S, and thus, the lens is consistent with being a very-low-mass star in the bulge and the TPRX measurement is likely spurious. By contrast, we show how a precise measurement of {mu}S with the mean properties of the bulge proper motion distribution would have given the opposite result; i.e., provided supporting evidence for an FFP in the disk and the TPRX measurement.