- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/AJ/154/23
- Title:
- Southern H II Region Discovery Survey: pilot survey
- Short Name:
- J/AJ/154/23
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The Southern H II Region Discovery Survey is a survey of the third and fourth quadrants of the Galactic plane that will detect radio recombination line (RRL) and continuum emission at cm-wavelengths from several hundred H II region candidates using the Australia Telescope Compact Array. The targets for this survey come from the WISE Catalog of Galactic H II Regions (Anderson et al. 2014, J/ApJS/212/1) and were identified based on mid-infrared and radio continuum emission. In this pilot project, two different configurations of the Compact Array Broad Band receiver and spectrometer system were used for short test observations. The pilot surveys detected RRL emission from 36 of 53 H II region candidates, as well as seven known H II regions that were included for calibration. These 36 recombination line detections confirm that the candidates are true H II regions and allow us to estimate their distances.
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- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/AJ/116/1
- Title:
- Southern Sky Redshift Survey
- Short Name:
- J/AJ/116/1
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We report redshifts, magnitudes, and morphological classifications for 5369 galaxies with m_B_<=15.5 and for 57 galaxies fainter than this limit, in two regions covering a total of 1.70 sr in the southern celestial hemisphere. The galaxy catalog is drawn primarily from the list of nonstellar objects identified in the Hubble Space Telescope Guide Star Catalog (GSC). The galaxies have positions accurate to ~1" and magnitudes with an rms scatter of ~0.3mag. We compute magnitudes (m_SSRS2_) from the relation between instrumental GSC magnitudes and the photometry by Lauberts & Valentijn. From a comparison with CCD photometry, we find that our system is homogeneous across the sky and corresponds to magnitudes measured at the isophotal level ~26mag/arcsec^2^. The precision of the radial velocities is ~40km/s, and the redshift survey is more than 99% complete to the m_SSRS2_=15.5mag limit. This sample is in the direction opposite that of the CfA2; in combination the two surveys provide an important database for studies of the properties of galaxies and their large-scale distribution in the nearby universe.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJS/81/413
- Title:
- Southern sky survey of 1355 spiral galaxies
- Short Name:
- J/ApJS/81/413
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The data from photometric and spectroscopic observations of 1355 southern spiral galaxies are presented and used to determine their distances and peculiar velocities via the Tully-Fisher (TF) relation. I-band CCD surface photometry was carried out using the 1-m and 3.9-m telescopes at Siding Spring Observatory. H-alpha rotation curves for 965 galaxies and 551 H I profiles are presented. The physical parameters, photometric and velocity data, distances, and peculiar velocities of the galaxies are presented in tabular form. The mean distance, systemic velocity, and average peculiar velocity of 24 clusters in the sample are given. TF diagrams are presented for each cluster.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/AJ/119/241
- Title:
- South Galactic cap MCT blue objects
- Short Name:
- J/AJ/119/241
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- Results for the south Galactic cap region of the Montreal-Cambridge-Tololo survey of blue subluminous stars are presented. This region overlaps the 840 deg^2^ region studied almost three decades ago by Slettebak & Brundage (1971AJ.....76..338S). We present a list of equatorial coordinates, photographic photometry, and spectroscopic identifications, as well as finding charts, for 188 blue objects [(U-B)_pg_<=-0.6] brighter than B_pg_=16.5 in this area. Completeness of the survey and comparisons with other similar efforts are discussed.
1755. S-PASS catalog at 2.3GHz
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/other/PASA/34.13
- Title:
- S-PASS catalog at 2.3GHz
- Short Name:
- J/other/PASA/34.
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The S-band Polarisation All-Sky Survey (S-PASS) has observed the entire southern sky using the 64-metre Parkes radio telescope at 2.3GHz with an effective bandwidth of 184MHz. The surveyed sky area covers all declinations DE<0{deg}. To analyse compact sources the survey data have been re-processed to produce a set of 107 Stokes I maps with 10.75-arcmin resolution and the large scale emission contribution filtered out. In this paper we use these Stokes I images to create a total intensity southern-sky extragalactic source catalogue at 2.3GHz. The source catalogue contains 23389 sources and covers a sky area of 16600deg^2^, excluding the Galactic plane for latitudes |b|<10{deg}. Approximately 8% of catalogued sources are resolved. S-PASS source positions are typically accurate to within 35-arcsec. At a flux density of 225mJy the S-PASS source catalogue is more than 95% complete, and ~94% of S-PASS sources brighter than 500mJy/beam have a counterpart at lower frequencies.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/884/L31
- Title:
- Spectra & HST obs. of gal. in 1ES1553+113 field
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/884/L31
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The relationship between galaxies and the state/chemical enrichment of the warm-hot intergalactic medium (WHIM) expected to dominate the baryon budget at low-z provides sensitive constraints on structure formation and galaxy evolution models. We present a deep redshift survey in the field of 1ES1553+113, a blazar with a unique combination of ultraviolet (UV)+X-ray spectra for surveys of the circumgalactic/intergalactic medium (CGM/IGM). Nicastro+ (2018Natur.558..406N) reported the detection of two OVII WHIM absorbers at z=0.4339 and 0.3551 in its spectrum, suggesting that the WHIM is metal rich and sufficient to close the missing baryons problem. Our survey indicates that the blazar is a member of a z=0.433 group and that the higher-z OVII candidate arises from its intragroup medium. The resulting bias precludes its use in baryon censuses. The z=0.3551 candidate occurs in an isolated environment 630kpc from the nearest galaxy (with stellar mass logM_*_/M_{sun}_~9.7), which we show is unexpected for the WHIM. Finally, we characterize the galactic environments of broad HI Ly{alpha} absorbers (Doppler widths of b=40-80km/s; T<~4x10^5^K) that provide metallicity-independent WHIM probes. On average, broad Ly{alpha} absorbers are ~2x closer to the nearest luminous (L>0.25L*) galaxy (700kpc) than narrow (b<30km/s; T<~4x10^5^K) ones (1300kpc) but ~2x further than OVI absorbers (350kpc). These observations suggest that gravitational collapse heats portions of the IGM to form the WHIM, but with feedback that does not enrich the IGM far beyond galaxy/group halos to levels currently observable in UV/X-ray metal lines.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/AJ/160/52
- Title:
- Spectral classification for 631 {rho}Puppis stars
- Short Name:
- J/AJ/160/52
- Date:
- 09 Mar 2022
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The {rho}Puppis stars are mid-F-type stars that show peculiar chemical-abundance patterns similar to those of the Am stars. Typically they exhibit overabundances of iron-peak elements such as Fe and Ni and s- and r-process elements such as Sr and Eu, and underabundances of certain other elements including He, Ca, and Sc. It has been proposed that these stars are evolving Am stars passing through the short-lived phase that occurs between the re-establishment of convection and the consequent erasure of their chemical peculiarities. In this paper we suggest a second hypothesis: these stars may have acquired their peculiar abundance patterns in a fashion similar to the Barium stars, i.e., they may have gained the s-process element enhancements via mass transfer from a once asymptotic giant-branch companion star, now turned white dwarf. This study will detail our efforts to investigate the {rho}Puppis stars with regard to these two hypotheses, with a view to understanding these stars and their significance in terms of stellar evolution. We have performed a spectral classification survey, and a detailed chemical-abundance analysis of selected {rho}Puppis stars. This paper gives an overview of the {rho}Puppis stars and describes the spectral classification survey which has increased the number of {rho}Puppis stars currently known from 6 to 49. A future paper will describe the chemical-abundance analysis which should provide insight into the nature of these stars.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJS/232/3
- Title:
- Spectral line surveys of 30 regions
- Short Name:
- J/ApJS/232/3
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- Spectral line surveys are an indispensable tool for exploring the physical and chemical evolution of astrophysical environments due to the vast amount of data that can be obtained in a relatively short amount of time. We present deep, broadband spectral line surveys of 30 interstellar clouds using two broadband {lambda}=1.3mm receivers at the Caltech Submillimeter Observatory. This information can be used to probe the influence of physical environment on molecular complexity. We observed a wide variety of sources to examine the relative abundances of organic molecules as they relate to the physical properties of the source (i.e., temperature, density, dynamics, etc.). The spectra are highly sensitive, with noise levels <=25mK at a velocity resolution of ~0.35km/s. In the initial analysis presented here, column densities and rotational temperatures have been determined for the molecular species that contribute significantly to the spectral line density in this wavelength regime. We present these results and discuss their implications for complex molecule formation in the interstellar medium.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/III/40A
- Title:
- Spectral Survey of Southern Milky Way
- Short Name:
- III/40A
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The spectral survey, carried out at the Stockholm Observatory, was initiated by B. Lindblad. The observational material was obtained by L.O. Loden, K. Loden and others in the years 1956-1965, when the Stockholm Observatory took part in a joint enterprise for using the Harvard-Boyden station. The Swedish Natural Science Research Council, the Royal Academy of the Sciences, and the K. and A. Wallenberg Foundation funded the observations, which are based on both direct and objective prism plates. The data were published in three parts, the first having less precise positions than the others. The coordinates for Catalogue I (3033) were later recomputed with the same reduction procedure as Catalogues II (3034) and III (3035), making the present catalogue uniform (Andersen, 1977). The files include star identification, finding chart identification, RA and Dec, galactic longitude and latitude, spectral type, blue magnitude, visual magnitude and remarks. The data concerning the part 2 were revised by Brian Skiff in November 1996 (see the "History" section below)
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/614/A135
- Title:
- Spectra of 78 PN central stars
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/614/A135
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- There are more than 3000 known Galactic planetary nebulae (PNe), but only 492 central stars of Galactic planetary nebulae (CSPN) have known spectral types. It is vital to increase this number in order to have reliable statistics, which will lead to an increase of our understanding of these amazing objects. We aim to contribute to the knowledge of central stars of planetary nebulae and stellar evolution. This observational study is based on Gemini Multi-Object Spectrographs (GMOS) and with the Intermediate Dispersion Spectrograph (IDS) at the Isaac Newton Telescope (INT) spectra of 78 CSPN. The objects were selected because they did not have any previous classification, or the present classification is ambiguous. These new high quality spectra allowed us to identify the key stellar lines for determining spectral classification in the Morgan-Keenan (MK) system. We have acquired optical spectra of a large sample of CSPN. From the observed targets, 50 are classified here for the first time while for 28 the existing classifications have been improved. In seven objects we have identified a P-Cygni profile at the HeI lines. Six of these CSPN are late O-type. The vast majority of the stars in the sample exhibit an absorption-type spectrum, and in one case we have found wide emission lines typical of [WR] stars. We give a complementary, and preliminary, classification criterion to obtain the sub-type of the O(H)-type CSPN. Finally, we give a more realistic value of the proportion of CSPN that are rich or poor in hydrogen.