A 24 and 70 Micron Survey of the Inner Galactic Disk with MIPS
Short Name:
MIPSGAL
Date:
27 Oct 2022 19:00:00
Publisher:
NASA/IPAC Infrared Science Archive
Description:
MIPSGAL is a survey of the inner 248 square degrees of the Galactic plane at 24 and 70 microns using the MIPS instrument aboard the Spitzer Space Telescope. The survey covers Galactic latitudes of -1° < b < +1° for Galactic longitudes of l < 62° and l > 298°. Version 3.0 of the MIPSGAL data includes mosaics only at 24um, but covering the entire survey region. |b| < 1° is covered for -68° < l < 69°, and |b| < 3° is covered for -8° < l < 9°.
A catalogue of mid-infrared slit-less spectra (5.5-12.5 ?m) extracted from the AKARI/IRC MIR-S spectroscopic observation data. All 886 MIR-S spectroscopic data obtained in Phases 1&2 are analyzed, and 862 spectra of 604 individual sources that are little contaminated by nearby sources are catalogued. We also present a 9 ?m point source catalogue generated as a by-product. The point source catalogue contains 42,387 sources brighter than 0.3 mJy.
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.
AKARI/IRC NIR Low-resolution Spectral Catalogue of Diffuse Sky Patches
Short Name:
AKARI_IRC_SPEC_DSP
Date:
07 Feb 2023 00:53:40
Publisher:
JVO
Description:
This catalog contains the 278 low-resolution (R~20) near-infrared (1.8-5.3 micron) spectra of diffuse sky covering a wide range of galactic and ecliptic latitudes with the Infrared Camera (IRC) onboard AKARI before the exhaustion of liquid-helium (from September 2006 to May 2007). Advanced reduction methods specialized for the slit spectroscopy of diffuse sky spectra are developed for constructing this spectral catalog.
AKARI/IRC NIR Spectral Atlas of Galactic Planetary Nebulae
Short Name:
AKARI_IRC_SPEC_GALPN
Date:
07 Feb 2023 00:54:25
Publisher:
JVO
Description:
This catalog contains near-infrared (2.5--5.0 micron) low-resolution (R ~ 100) spectra of 72 Galactic Planetary Nebulae (PNe), obtained with the InfraRed Camera (IRC) onboard the AKARI satellite in the post-helium phase. The objects were treated as almost point sources for the IRC. Grism spectroscopy was carried out in the 1-arcmin window. The near-infrared spectra were obtained in a slit-less mode without any flux loss due to a slit. The spectra show emission features including hydrogen recombination lines, helium recombination lines, the 3.3--3.5 micron hydrocarbon features, [MgIV] at 4.49 micron, and [ArVI] at 4.53 micron. This catalog also contains the intensity and equivalent width of these emission features measured by spectral fitting. The source list (source.dat) summarizes observations. As ancillary data, the magnitudes in the V- and Ks-band, the extinction at V-band toward the objects, and the effective temperature collected from literature are listed in another table (misc.dat). The intensities and the equivalent widths of the emission features are tabulated in different tables (intens.dat and equivw.dat). Each object is identified by the PNG ID (PNG) or an observation ID (Obs-ID). One-dimensional near-infrared spectra are stored in a directory (spc/). Each spectrum is identified by the observation ID.
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.
The AllWISE program builds upon the work of the successful Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer mission (WISE; Wright et al. 2010) by combining data from the WISE cryogenic and NEOWISE (Mainzer et al. 2011 ApJ, 731, 53) post-cryogenic survey phases to form the most comprehensive view of the full mid-infrared sky currently available. By combining the data from two complete sky coverage epochs using an advanced data processing system, AllWISE has generated new products that have enhanced photometric sensitivity and accuracy, and improved astrometric precision compared to the 2012 WISE All-Sky Data Release. Exploiting the 6 to 12 month baseline between the WISE sky coverage epochs enables AllWISE to measure source motions for the first time, and to compute improved flux variability statistics.
The AllWISE Images Atlas is comprised of 18,240 4-band calibrated 1.56°x1.56° FITS images, depth-of-coverage and noise maps, and image metadata produced by coadding nearly 7.9 million Single-exposure images from all survey phases.