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- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/AJ/140/1150
- Title:
- GSC 3355-0394 BVRI differential photometry
- Short Name:
- J/AJ/140/1150
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- GSC 3355 0394 has an EB-type light curve, which is dominated by hot and cool spot activities. It displays night-to-night variations in light-curve shapes. The period study yields six new times of minimum light and the first precision ephemeris, HJD TminI=2454408.9547+/-0.0017+0.4621603+/-.0000008d*E. VRcIc standard magnitudes are presented. BVRI Wilson synthetic light-curve solutions are calculated for both a Mode 4 (V1010 Oph-type, semidetached, more massive component filling its Roche lobe) configuration and a Mode 3, contact configuration (fill-out 100% or critical contact). The critical contact is the lowest residual solution. Four major spot regions are needed to model this binary, at least one is evidently a stream spot.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/other/JAD/14.1
- Title:
- GSC04778-00152 photometry and spectroscopy
- Short Name:
- J/other/JAD/14.1
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- Photometric and spectroscopic data of the southern contact binary GSC 04778-00152 are presented. Six new times of minimum are listed. For modelling purposes, we provide UBVRI phase diagrams of the contact binary with the contribution of the nearby companion removed.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/other/JAD/16.1
- Title:
- GSC 8613-2122 UBVRI and uvby light curves
- Short Name:
- J/other/JAD/16.1
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present a collection of more than 4000 UBVRI and uvby differential photometric measurements of the newly-discovered 12th-magnitude southern Delta Scuti star GSC 08613-02122. The star has a main pulsation period of about 4 hours with an amplitude of 0.05m in the V band. The pulsation amplitude is variable, and the O-C diagram reveals the existence of a long P~29.5-day cycle, which possibly results from the beating of the main pulsation frequency with a nearby frequency.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/II/143A
- Title:
- Guide Star Photometric Catalog, Updated Version 1
- Short Name:
- II/143A
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The Guide Star Photometric Catalog (GSPC) is an all-sky set of 1477 photoelectrically determined BV sequences covering the magnitude range from 9 to 15. The GSPC was created to provide photometric calibrators for the HST Guide Star Catalog (GSC). Each sequence nominally contains (at least) six stars, each with a photometric precision of 0.05 mag. In practice, a small number of sequences contain fewer stars; and the precisions achieved for the faintest stars are more nearly 0.1 mag. For declinations greater than +3 degrees the sequences generally lie near the centers of the original Palomar Observatory - National Geographic Society Sky Atlas. Other sequences lie near the centers of the ESO/SERC Southern Sky Atlas. The catalog also includes a list of suspected variable stars, a bibliography of literature sequences, and additional information which was useful in the data reduction and for quality control of the final catalog. The full catalog is made of 7 FITS files: tables 1 to 5, references (table 6 of the paper) and the actual catalogue (table 7 of the paper). The ascii versions of Tables 1 to 5 are included in this file; the ascii version of the references (refs.dat) and of the actual catalogue (catalog.dat) are described here. The updated version 1 was created by replacing photometric sequences P040, P421, S335 and S742 in GSPC version 1. The updated sequences have improved photometry and/or positions. In addition the sigma's in V and B-V (here e_V and e_B-V) were replaced with the values provided by the authors when we noted a discrepancy with the published values.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/II/272
- Title:
- Guide Star Photometric Catalog V2.4
- Short Name:
- II/272
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We publish 1653 CCD photometric sequences in the Johnson-Kron-Cousins standard system, distributed both in the northern and southern hemispheres, useful for the calibration of photographic photometry of Schmidt survey plates. The collection and reduction of the CCD data presented here are part of a long-term program devoted to the construction of the Second Guide Star Photometric Catalog (GSPC-II). The GSPC-II is an all-sky catalog of photometric stellar sequences with a limiting magnitude of V=19 or fainter, in the (B), V, and R passbands of the Johnson-Kron-Cousins system. Standard photometric errors are at the level of ~ 0.07 for a V ~ 19 magnitude star. These sequences are being used by teams of the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) and the Osservatorio Astronomico of Torino (OATo) for the photometric calibration of the Second Guide Star Catalog.
1447. GU Mon BV light curves
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/590/A45
- Title:
- GU Mon BV light curves
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/590/A45
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present a comprehensive analysis, including B and V light curves and 11 high-resolution spectra, to verify the orbital period and determine parameters. The spectroscopic and photometric analyses agree on a period of 0.896640+/-0.000007d. We determine a mass of 9.0+/-0.6M_{sun}_ for each component and temperatures of 28000+/-2000K. Both values are consistent with the spectral type B1V. The two stars are overfilling their respective Roche lobes, sharing a common envelope, and therefore the orbit is synchronised and circularised. Thetwo stars are in a very advanced stage of interaction, with their extreme physical similarity likely due to the common envelope. The expected evolution of such a system will very probably lead to a merger while still on the main sequence.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/792/L4
- Title:
- GV galaxies UV-optical radial color profiles
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/792/L4
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- In this Letter, we analyze the radial ultraviolet-optical color distributions in a sample of low redshift green valley galaxies, with the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX)+Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) images, to investigate how the residual recent star formation is distributed in these galaxies. We find that the dust-corrected u-r colors of early-type galaxies (ETGs) are flat out to R_90_, while the colors monotonously turn blue when r>0.5 R_50_ for late-type galaxies (LTGs). More than half of the ETGs are blue-cored and have remarkable positive NUV-r color gradients, suggesting that their star formations are centrally concentrated. The rest have flat color distributions out to R_90_. The centrally concentrated star formation activity in a large portion of ETGs is confirmed by the SDSS spectroscopy, showing that ~50% of the ETGs have EW(H{alpha})>6.0 {AA}. Of the LTGs, 95% show uniform radial color profiles, which can be interpreted as a red bulge plus an extended blue disk. The links between the two kinds of ETGs, e.g., those objects having remarkable "blue-cores" and those having flat color gradients, are less known and require future investigations. It is suggested that the LTGs follow a general model by which quenching first occurs in the core regions, and then finally extend to the rest of the galaxy. Our results can be re-examined and have important implications for the IFU surveys, such as MaNGA and SAMI.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/649/A72
- Title:
- GW190814 observations taken with MeerLICHT
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/649/A72
- Date:
- 22 Feb 2022
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The Advanced LIGO and Virgo gravitational wave observatories detected a signal on 2019 August 14 during their third observing run, named GW190814. A large number of electromagnetic facilities conducted follow-up campaigns in the search for a possible counterpart to the gravitational wave event, which was made especially promising given the early source classification of a neutron star-black hole merger. We present the results of the GW follow-up campaign taken with the wide-field optical telescope MeerLICHT, located at the South African Astronomical Observatory Sutherland site. We use our results to constrain possible kilonova models. MeerLICHT observed more than 95% of the probability localisation each night for over a week in three optical bands (u,q,i) with our initial observations beginning almost 2 hours after the GW detection. We describe the search for new transients in MeerLICHT data and investigate how our limiting magnitudes can be used to constrain an AT2017gfo-like kilonova. A single new transient was found in our analysis of MeerLICHT data, which we exclude from being the electromagnetic counterpart to GW190814 owing to the existence of a spatially unresolved source at the coordinates of the transient in archival data. Using our limiting magnitudes, the confidence with which we can exclude the presence of an AT2017gfo-like kilonova at the distance of GW190814 was low (<10^-4^).
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/608/A48
- Title:
- HAE229 CO (1-0) ATCA datacube
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/608/A48
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- It is not yet known if the properties of molecular gas in distant protocluster galaxies are significantly acted by their environment as galaxies are in local clusters. Through a deep, 64 hours of effective on-source integration with the Australian Telescope Compact Array (ATCA), we discovered a massive, M_mol_=2.0+/-0.2x0^11^M_{sun}_, extended, ~40kpc, CO(1-0)-emitting disk in the protocluster surrounding the radio galaxy, MRC1138-262. The galaxy, at z_CO_=2.1478, is a clumpy, massive disk galaxy, M*~5x10^11^M_{sun}_, which lies 250kpc in projection from MRC1138-262 and is a known H{alpha} emitter, named HAE229. This source has a molecular gas fraction of ~30%. The CO emission has a kinematic gradient along its major axis, centered on the highest surface brightness rest-frame optical emission, consistent with HAE229 being a rotating disk. Surprisingly, a significant fraction of the CO emission lies outside of the UV/optical emission. In spite of this, HAE229 follows the same relation between star-formation rate and molecular gas mass as normal field galaxies. HAE229 is the first CO(1-0) detection of an ordinary, star-forming galaxy in a protocluster.We compare a sample of cluster members at z>0.4 that are detected in low-order CO transitions, with a similar sample of sources drawn from the field.We confirm findings that the CO-luminosity and full-width at half maximum (FWHM) are correlated in starbursts and show that this relation is valid for normal high-z galaxies as well as for those in overdensities. We do not find a clear dichotomy in the integrated Schmidt-Kennicutt relation for protocluster and field galaxies. Our results suggest that environment does not have an impact on the "star-formation electronic efficiency" or the molecular gas content of high-redshift galaxies. Not finding any environmental dependence in these characteristics, especially for such an extended CO disk, suggests that environmentally-specific processes such as ram pressure stripping do not operate electronic efficiently in (proto)clusters.