1990 National Water Quality Laboratory Services Catalog
Pritt, Jeffrey; Jones, Berwyn E.
1989-01-01
PREFACE This catalog provides information about analytical services available from the National Water Quality Laboratory (NWQL) to support programs of the Water Resources Division of the U.S. Geological Survey. To assist personnel in the selection of analytical services, the catalog lists cost, sample volume, applicable concentration range, detection level, precision of analysis, and preservation techniques for samples to be submitted for analysis. Prices for services reflect operationa1 costs, the complexity of each analytical procedure, and the costs to ensure analytical quality control. The catalog consists of five parts. Part 1 is a glossary of terminology; Part 2 lists the bottles, containers, solutions, and other materials that are available through the NWQL; Part 3 describes the field processing of samples to be submitted for analysis; Part 4 describes analytical services that are available; and Part 5 contains indices of analytical methodology and Chemical Abstract Services (CAS) numbers. Nomenclature used in the catalog is consistent with WATSTORE and STORET. The user is provided with laboratory codes and schedules that consist of groupings of parameters which are measured together in the NWQL. In cases where more than one analytical range is offered for a single element or compound, different laboratory codes are given. Book 5 of the series 'Techniques of Water Resources Investigations of the U.S. Geological Survey' should be consulted for more information about the analytical procedures included in the tabulations. This catalog supersedes U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 86-232 '1986-87-88 National Water Quality Laboratory Services Catalog', October 1985.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Palomar/MSU and SDSS-DR7 M dwarfs with GALEX obs. (Jones+, 2016)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Jones, D. O.; West, A. A.
2016-03-01
To compare magnetic activity in the optical with UV activity, we matched the SDSS Data Release 7 (DR7; Abazajian et al. 2009, II/294) M dwarf spectroscopic catalog (West et al. 2011, J/AJ/141/97; R~2000) to GALEX data from Data Releases 6 and 7 (NUV: ~1750-2750Å and FUV: ~1350-1750Å; see II/312). The DR7 M dwarf catalog consists of 70841 SDSS M dwarfs with spectral types verified by eye. We supplemented the SDSS sample with the Palomar/MSU Nearby-Star Spectroscopic Survey (PMSU; Reid et al. 1995, III/198), which contains 1684 nearby low-mass stars (1415 M dwarfs) as part of the northern sample (δ>-30°) and 282 nearby low-mass stars (228 M dwarfs) as part of the southern sample. (2 data files).
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Reph, M. G.
1984-01-01
This document provides a summary of information available in the NASA Climate Data Catalog. The catalog provides scientific users with technical information about selected climate parameter data sets and the associated sensor measurements from which they are derived. It is an integral part of the Pilot Climate Data System (PCDS), an interactive, scientific management system for locating, obtaining, manipulating, and displaying climate research data. The catalog is maintained in a machine readable representation which can easily be accessed via the PCDS. The purposes, format and content of the catalog are discussed. Summarized information is provided about each of the data sets currently described in the catalog. Sample detailed descriptions are included for individual data sets or families of related data sets.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
1979
Used as an integral part of the migrant student skills system operated by the Migrant Student Record Transfer System (MSRTS), the reading skills list contains a catalog of reading skills typical of the K-12 grade range. This catalog includes a sample of the MSRTS transmittal record which permits teachers to report the reading skills being worked…
Second Line of Defense Master Spares Catalog
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Henderson, Dale L.; Muller, George; Mercier, Theresa M.
This catalog is intended to be a comprehensive listing of repair parts, components, kits, and consumable items used on the equipment deployed at SLD sites worldwide. The catalog covers detection, CAS, network, ancillary equipment, and tools. The catalog is backed by a Master Parts Database which is used to generate the standard report views of the catalog. The master parts database is a relational database containing a record for every part in the master parts catalog along with supporting tables for normalizing fields in the records. The database also includes supporting queries, database maintenance forms, and reports.
Seismic sample areas defined from incomplete catalogues: an application to the Italian territory
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Mulargia, F.; Tinti, S.
1985-11-01
The comprehensive understanding of earthquake source-physics under real conditions requires the study not of single faults as separate entities but rather of a seismically active region as a whole, accounting for the interaction among different structures. We define "seismic sample area" the most convenient region to be used as a natural laboratory for the study of seismic source physics. This coincides with the region where the average large magnitude seismicity is the highest. To this end, time and space future distributions of large earthquakes are to be estimated. Using catalog seismicity as an input, the rate of occurrence is not constant but appears generally biased by incompleteness in some parts of the catalog and possible nonstationarities in seismic activity. We present a statistical procedure which is capable, under a few mild assumptions, of both detecting nonstationarities in seismicity and finding the incomplete parts of a seismic catalog. The procedure is based on Kolmogorov-Smirnov nonparametric statistics, and can be applied without a priori assuming the parent distribution of the events. The efficiency of this procedure allows the analysis of small data sets. An application to the Italian territory is presented, using the most recent version of the ENEL seismic catalog. Seismic activity takes place in six well defined areas but only five of them have a number of events sufficient for analysis. Barring a few exceptions, seismicity is found stationary throughout the whole catalog span 1000-1980. The eastern Alps region stands out as the best "sample area", with the highest average probability of event occurrence per time and area unit. Final objective of this characterization is to stimulate a program of intensified research.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: A cosmic void catalog of SDSS DR12 BOSS galaxies (Mao+, 2017)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Mao, Q.; Berlind, A. A.; Scherrer, R. J.; Neyrinck, M. C.; Scoccimarro, R.; Tinker, J. L.; McBride, C. K.; Schneider, D. P.; Pan, K.; Bizyaev, D.; Malanushenko, E.; Malanushenko, V.
2017-08-01
We present a cosmic void catalog using the large-scale structure galaxy catalog from the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS). This galaxy catalog is part of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Data Release 12 and is the final catalog of SDSS-III. We take into account the survey boundaries, masks, and angular and radial selection functions, and apply the ZOBOV (Neyrinck 2008MNRAS.386.2101N) void finding algorithm to the Galaxy catalog. We identify a total of 10643 voids. After making quality cuts to ensure that the voids represent real underdense regions, we obtain 1228 voids with effective radii spanning the range 20-100h-1Mpc and with central densities that are, on average, 30% of the mean sample density. We release versions of the catalogs both with and without quality cuts. We discuss the basic statistics of voids, such as their size and redshift distributions, and measure the radial density profile of the voids via a stacking technique. In addition, we construct mock void catalogs from 1000 mock galaxy catalogs, and find that the properties of BOSS voids are in good agreement with those in the mock catalogs. We compare the stellar mass distribution of galaxies living inside and outside of the voids, and find no large difference. These BOSS and mock void catalogs are useful for a number of cosmological and galaxy environment studies. (1 data file).
Morphology and luminosity segregation of galaxies in nearby loose groups
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Girardi, M.; Rigoni, E.; Mardirossian, F.; Mezzetti, M.
2003-08-01
We study morphology and luminosity segregation of galaxies in loose groups. We analyze the two catalogs of groups identified in the Nearby Optical Galaxy (NOG) sample, by means of hierarchical and percolation ``friends-of-friends'' methods (HG and PG catalogs, respectively). In the first part of our analysis we consider 387 and 436 groups of HG and PG and compare morphology- (luminosity-) weighted to unweighted group properties: velocity dispersion, mean pairwise distance, and mean groupcentric distance of member galaxies. The second part of our analysis is based on two ensemble systems, one for each catalog, built by suitably combining together galaxies of all groups (1584 and 1882 galaxies for HG and PG groups). We find that earlier-type (brighter) galaxies are more clustered and lie closer to the group centers, both in position and in velocity, than later-type (fainter) galaxies. Spatial segregations are stronger than kinematical segregations. These effects are generally detected at the >˜ 3-sigma level. Luminosity segregation is shown to be independent of morphology segregation. Our main conclusions are strengthened by the detection of segregation in both hierarchical and percolation catalogs. Our results agree with a continuum of segregation properties of galaxies in systems, from low-mass groups to massive clusters.
Catalog of infrared observations. Part 1: Data
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Gezari, Daniel Y.; Schmitz, Marion; Mead, Jaylee M.
1987-01-01
The Catalog of Infrared Observations (CIO) is a compilation of infrared astronomical observational data obtained from an extensive literature search of astronomical journals and major astronomical catalogs and surveys. The literature searches are complete for 1965 through 1986 in this Second Edition. The Catalog is published in two parts, with the observational data (roughly 200,000 observations of 20,000 individual sources) listed in Part I, and supporting appendices in Part II. The expanded Second Edition contains a new feature: complete IRAS 4-band data for all CIO sources detected, listed with the main Catalog observations, as well as in complete detail in the Appendix. The appendices include an atlas of infrared source positions, two bibliographies of infrared literature upon which the search was based, and, keyed to the main Catalog listings (organized alphabetically by author and then chronologically), an atlas of infrared spectral ranges, and IRAS data from the CIO sources. The complete CIO database is available to qualified users in printed microfiche and magnetic tape formats.
Korea Institute for Advanced Study Value-Added Galaxy Catalog
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Choi, Yun-Young; Han, Du-Hwan; Kim, Sungsoo S.
2010-12-01
We present the Korea Institute for Advanced Study Value-Added Galaxy Catalog (KIAS VAGC),a catalog of galaxies based on the Large Scale Structure (LSS) sample of New York University Value-Added Galaxy Catalog (NYU VAGC) Data Release 7. Our catalog supplements redshifts of 10,497 galaxies with 10 < r_{P} ≤ 17.6 (1455 with 10 < r_{P} ≤ 14.5) to the NYU VAGC LSS sample. Redshifts from various existing catalogs such as the Updated Zwicky Catalog, the IRAS Point Source Catalog Redshift Survey, the Third Reference Catalogue of Bright Galaxies, and the Two Degree Field Galaxy Redshift Survey have been put into the NYU VAGC photometric catalog. Our supplementation significantly improves spectroscopic completeness: the area covered by the spectroscopic sample with completeness higher than 95% increases from 2.119 to 1.737 sr.Our catalog also provides morphological types of all galaxies that are determined by the automated morphology classification scheme of Park & Choi (2005), and related parameters, together with fundamental photometry parameters supplied by the NYU VAGC. Our catalog contains matches to objects in the Max Planck for Astronomy (MPA) & Johns Hopkins University (JHU) spectrum measurements (Data Release 7). This new catalog, the KIAS VAGC, is complementary to the NYU VAGC and MPA-JHU catalog.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Local Swift-BAT AGN observed with Herschel (Lutz+, 2018)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lutz, D.; Shimizu, T.; Davies, R. I.; Herrera Camus, R.; Sturm, E.; Tacconi, L. J.; Veilleux, S.
2017-09-01
Table A.1 lists the basic properties of the BAT AGN and reference samples, and the derived far-infrared sizes. For guidance, part of the table and related notes are also included in an appendix to the paper. (1 data file).
Modeling MgII Absorbers from SDSS Spectroscopic and Imaging Catalogs
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Rimoldini, L. G.; Menard, B.; Nestor, D. B.; Rao, S. M.; Sheth, R. K.; Turnshek, D. A.; Zibetti, S.; Feather, S.; Quider, A.
2005-12-01
The detection of more than 14,000 MgII absorption doublets along the sight-lines to SDSS DR4 QSOs (pursued by Turnshek, Nestor, Rao, and collaborators) has produced the largest sample of MgII absorbers to date in the redshift interval 0.37 < z < 2.30. The statistical relation between galaxies and MgII systems is investigated by cross-correlating the spectroscopic MgII catalog with the SDSS imaging catalog of galaxies in the neighborhood of QSO sight-lines. A model for MgII absorbers is derived to account for the measured MgII rest equivalent width distribution and the absorbing galaxy properties (e.g., luminosity, impact parameter, and morphological type). Some preliminary results of our analysis are presented. This work was supported in part by the National Science Foundation. L.G.R. acknowledges further support from the Z. Daniel's Predoctoral Fellowship.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: OGLE high proper motion stars towards MC (Soszynski+, 2002)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Soszynski, I.; Zebrun, K.; Udalski, A.; Wozniak, P. R.; Szymanski, M.; Kubiak, M.; Pietrzynski, G.; Szewczyk, O.; Wyrzykowski, L.
2002-11-01
We present a catalog of high proper motion (HPM) stars detected in the foreground of central parts of the Magellanic Clouds. The Catalog contains 2161 objects in the 4.5 square degree area towards the LMC, and 892 HPM stars in the 2.4 square degree area towards the SMC. The Catalog is based on observations collected during four years of the OGLE-II microlensing survey. The Difference Image Analysis (DIA) of the images provided candidate HPM stars with proper motion as small as 4mas/yr. These appeared as pseudo-variables, and were all measured astrometrically on all CCD images, providing typically about 400 data points per star. The reference frame was defined by the majority of background stars, most of them members of the Magellanic Clouds. The reflex motion due to solar velocity with respect to the local standards of rest is clearly seen. The largest proper motion in our sample is 363mas/yr. Parallaxes were measured with errors smaller than 20% for several stars. (2 data files).
41 CFR 101-30.602 - Authority for issuance.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-07-01
... Regulations System FEDERAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS SUPPLY AND PROCUREMENT 30-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM 30.6-GSA Section of the Federal Supply Catalog § 101-30.602 Authority for issuance. The GSA section of the Federal Supply Catalog is issued as an integral part of the Federal Supply Catalog and the Federal...
41 CFR 101-30.602 - Authority for issuance.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-07-01
... Regulations System FEDERAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS SUPPLY AND PROCUREMENT 30-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM 30.6-GSA Section of the Federal Supply Catalog § 101-30.602 Authority for issuance. The GSA section of the Federal Supply Catalog is issued as an integral part of the Federal Supply Catalog and the Federal...
41 CFR 101-30.602 - Authority for issuance.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-07-01
... Regulations System FEDERAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS SUPPLY AND PROCUREMENT 30-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM 30.6-GSA Section of the Federal Supply Catalog § 101-30.602 Authority for issuance. The GSA section of the Federal Supply Catalog is issued as an integral part of the Federal Supply Catalog and the Federal...
41 CFR 101-30.602 - Authority for issuance.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-07-01
... Regulations System FEDERAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS SUPPLY AND PROCUREMENT 30-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM 30.6-GSA Section of the Federal Supply Catalog § 101-30.602 Authority for issuance. The GSA section of the Federal Supply Catalog is issued as an integral part of the Federal Supply Catalog and the Federal...
41 CFR 101-30.602 - Authority for issuance.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-07-01
... Regulations System FEDERAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS SUPPLY AND PROCUREMENT 30-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM 30.6-GSA Section of the Federal Supply Catalog § 101-30.602 Authority for issuance. The GSA section of the Federal Supply Catalog is issued as an integral part of the Federal Supply Catalog and the Federal...
Catalog of Mount St. Helens 2004-2007 Dome Samples with Major- and Trace-Element Chemistry
Thornber, Carl R.; Pallister, John S.; Rowe, Michael C.; McConnell, Siobhan; Herriott, Trystan M.; Eckberg, Alison; Stokes, Winston C.; Cornelius, Diane Johnson; Conrey, Richard M.; Hannah, Tammy; Taggart, Joseph E.; Adams, Monique; Lamothe, Paul J.; Budahn, James R.; Knaack, Charles M.
2008-01-01
Sampling and analysis of eruptive products at Mount St. Helens is an integral part of volcano monitoring efforts conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey?s Cascades Volcano Observatory (CVO). The objective of our eruption sampling program is to enable petrological assessments of pre-eruptive magmatic conditions, critical for ascertaining mechanisms for eruption triggering and forecasting potential changes in eruption behavior. This report provides a catalog of near-vent lithic debris and new dome-lava collected during 34 intra-crater sampling forays throughout the October 2004 to October 2007 (2004?7) eruptive interval at Mount St. Helens. In addition, we present comprehensive bulk-rock geochemistry for a time-series of representative (2004?7) eruption products. This data, along with that in a companion report on Mount St. Helens 2004 to 2006 tephra by Rowe and others (2008), are presented in support of the contents of the U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1750 (Sherrod and others, eds., 2008). Readers are referred to appropriate chapters in USGS Professional Paper 1750 for detailed narratives of eruptive activity during this time period and for interpretations of sample characteristics and geochemical data. The suite of rock samples related to the 2004?7 eruption of Mount St. Helens and presented in this catalog are archived at the David A. Johnson Cascades Volcano Observatory, Vancouver, Wash. The Mount St. Helens 2004?7 Dome Sample Catalogue with major- and trace-element geochemistry is tabulated in 3 worksheets of the accompanying Microsoft Excel file, of2008-1130.xls. Table 1 provides location and sampling information. Table 2 presents sample descriptions. In table 3, bulk-rock major and trace-element geochemistry is listed for 44 eruption-related samples with intra-laboratory replicate analyses of 19 dacite lava samples. A brief overview of the collection methods and lithology of dome samples is given below as an aid to deciphering the dome sample catalog. This is followed by an explanation of the categories of sample information (column headers) in Tables 1 and 2. A summary of the analytical methods used to obtain the geochemical data in this report introduces the presentation of major- and trace-element geochemistry of 2004?7 Mount St. Helens dome samples in table 3. Intra-laboratory results for the USGS AGV-2 standard are presented (tables 4 and 5), which demonstrate the compatibility of chemical data from different sources.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
International Federation of Library Associations, The Hague (Netherlands).
Papers on cataloging and national bibliography presented at the 1984 general conference of IFLA include: (1) "Pratiques et Problemes de Catalogage au Senegal" (Cataloging Practices and Problems in Senegal) (Marietou Diop Diongue, Senegal); (2) "The Consequences of New Technologies in Classification and Subject Cataloging in Third…
VizieR Online Data Catalog: QSO eHAQ0111+0641 spectra (Fynbo+, 2017)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Fynbo, J. P. U.; Krogager, J.-K.; Heintz, K. E.; Geier, S.; Moller, P.; Noterdaeme, P.; Christensen, L.; Ledoux, C.; Jakobsson, P.
2017-09-01
eHAQ0111+0641 was observed with the OSIRIS instrument at the Gran Telescopio Canarias (GTC) as part of a larger sample of candidate red quasars. We secured spectroscopy with OSIRIS and a range of grisms to better constrain the spectral energy distribution, metal lines, and hydrogen Lyα line. (2 data files).
Mode switching in volcanic seismicity: El Hierro 2011-2013
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Roberts, Nick S.; Bell, Andrew F.; Main, Ian G.
2016-05-01
The Gutenberg-Richter b value is commonly used in volcanic eruption forecasting to infer material or mechanical properties from earthquake distributions. Such studies typically analyze discrete time windows or phases, but the choice of such windows is subjective and can introduce significant bias. Here we minimize this sample bias by iteratively sampling catalogs with randomly chosen windows and then stack the resulting probability density functions for the estimated b>˜ value to determine a net probability density function. We examine data from the El Hierro seismic catalog during a period of unrest in 2011-2013 and demonstrate clear multimodal behavior. Individual modes are relatively stable in time, but the most probable b>˜ value intermittently switches between modes, one of which is similar to that of tectonic seismicity. Multimodality is primarily associated with intermittent activation and cessation of activity in different parts of the volcanic system rather than with respect to any systematic inferred underlying process.
S201 catalog of far-ultraviolet objects
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Page, T.; Carruthers, G. K.; Hill, R. E.
1978-01-01
A catalog of star images was compiled from images obtained by an NRL Far-Ultraviolet Camera/Spectrograph operated from 21 to 23 April 1972 on the lunar surface during the Apollo-16 mission. These images were scanned on a microdensitometer, and the output recorded on magnetic tapes. The catalog is divided into 11 parts, covering ten fields in the sky (the Sagittarius field being covered by two parts), and each part is headed by a constellation name and the field center coordinates. The errors in position of the detected images are less than about 3 arc-min. Correlations are given with star numbers in the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory catalog. Values are given of the peak density and the density volume. The text includes a discussion of the photometry, corrections thereto due to threshold and saturation effects, and its comparison with theoretical expectation, stellar model atmospheres, and a generalized far-ultraviolet interstellar extinction law. The S201 catalog is also available on a single reel of seven-track magnetic tape.
Apollo Lunar Sample Integration into Google Moon: A New Approach to Digitization
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Dawson, Melissa D.; Todd, nancy S.; Lofgren, Gary E.
2011-01-01
The Google Moon Apollo Lunar Sample Data Integration project is part of a larger, LASER-funded 4-year lunar rock photo restoration project by NASA s Acquisition and Curation Office [1]. The objective of this project is to enhance the Apollo mission data already available on Google Moon with information about the lunar samples collected during the Apollo missions. To this end, we have combined rock sample data from various sources, including Curation databases, mission documentation and lunar sample catalogs, with newly available digital photography of rock samples to create a user-friendly, interactive tool for learning about the Apollo Moon samples
Utilization and Maintenance of the Federal Catalog System (FCS)
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
1989-01-01
The Federal Catalog System (FCS) was established and substantiated by law to aid the national economy and promote greater efficiency in supply management operations throughout the Federal Government. This Handbook establishes policies and procedures to be followed by NASA installations and certain contractors in cataloging items of supply in the Federal Catalog System and prescribes use of the system in supply management operations. This Handbook is not intended to duplicate the Federal Cataloging Manuals or Federal Cataloging Handbooks. For the most part, it describes actions that are peculiar to NASA.
Catalog of infrared observations. Part 2: Appendixes
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Gezari, Daniel Y.; Schmitz, Marion; Mead, Jaylee M.
1987-01-01
The Catalog of Infrared Observations (CIO) is a compilation of infrared astronomical observational data obtained from an extensive literature search of astronomical journals and major astronomical catalogs and surveys. The literature searches are complete for years 1965 to 1986. Supporting appendixes are published in this part. The appendices include an atlas of infrared source positions, two bibliographies of infrared literature upon which the search was based, and, keyed to the main Catalog listings (organized alphabetically by first author, and by date), an atlas of infrared spectral ranges, and IRAS data for the CIO sources. The complete CIO database is available to qualified users in printed microfiche and magnetic tape formats.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Double-component model fitting of elliptical gal. (Oh+, 2017)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Oh, S.; Greene, J. E.; Lackner, C. N.
2017-09-01
We use the detailed visual morphology classification catalog of Nair & Abraham (2010, J/ApJS/186/427) to construct a sample of nearby elliptical galaxies in a range of mass and environment. The catalog is based on the SDSS DR4 main spectroscopic sample, and extends to z=0.1. (1 data file).
VizieR Online Data Catalog: ChaMP X-ray point source catalog (Kim+, 2007)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kim, M.; Kim, D.-W.; Wilkes, B. J.; Green, P. J.; Kim, E.; Anderson, C. S.; Barkhouse, W. A.; Evans, N. R.; Ivezic, Z.; Karovska, M.; Kashyap, V. L.; Lee, M. G.; Maksym, P.; Mossman, A. E.; Silverman, J. D.; Tananbaum, H. D.
2009-01-01
We present the Chandra Multiwavelength Project (ChaMP) X-ray point source catalog with ~6800 X-ray sources detected in 149 Chandra observations covering ~10deg2. The full ChaMP catalog sample is 7 times larger than the initial published ChaMP catalog. The exposure time of the fields in our sample ranges from 0.9 to 124ks, corresponding to a deepest X-ray flux limit of f0.5-8.0=9x10-16ergs/cm2/s. The ChaMP X-ray data have been uniformly reduced and analyzed with ChaMP-specific pipelines and then carefully validated by visual inspection. The ChaMP catalog includes X-ray photometric data in eight different energy bands as well as X-ray spectral hardness ratios and colors. To best utilize the ChaMP catalog, we also present the source reliability, detection probability, and positional uncertainty. (10 data files).
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Warren, W. H., Jr.
1980-01-01
The magnetic tape version of the Bonn catalog is described. The catalog contains a listing of supplemental stars having lower case letter designations following the BD numbers after which they have been inserted. A sample catalog is also presented.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: OGLE RR Lyrae in LMC (Soszynski+, 2003)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Soszynski, I.; Udalski, A.; Szymanski, M.; Kubiak, M.; Pietrzynski, G.; Wozniak, P.; Zebrun, K.; Szewczyk, O.; Wyrzykowski, L.
2003-11-01
We present the catalog of RR Lyr stars discovered in a 4.5 square degrees area in the central parts of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC). Presented sample contains 7612 objects, including 5455 fundamental mode pulsators (RRab), 1655 first-overtone (RRc), 272 second-overtone (RRe) and 230 double-mode RR Lyr stars (RRd). Additionally we attach alist of several dozen other short-period pulsating variables. The catalog data include astrometry, periods, BVI photometry, amplitudes, and parameters of the Fourier decomposition of the I-band light curve of each object. We provide a list of six LMC star clusters which contain RR Lyr stars. The richest cluster, NGC 1835, hosts 84 RR Lyr variables. The period distribution of these stars suggests that NGC1835 shares features of Oosterhoff type I and type II groups. All presented data, including individual BVI observations and finding charts are available from the OGLE Internet archive at ftp://sirius.astrouw.edu.pl/ogle/ogle2/var_stars/lmc/rrlyr (6 data files).
Wheeler, Russell L.
2014-01-01
Computation of probabilistic earthquake hazard requires an estimate of Mmax, the maximum earthquake magnitude thought to be possible within a specified geographic region. This report is Part A of an Open-File Report that describes the construction of a global catalog of moderate to large earthquakes, from which one can estimate Mmax for most of the Central and Eastern United States and adjacent Canada. The catalog and Mmax estimates derived from it were used in the 2014 edition of the U.S. Geological Survey national seismic-hazard maps. This Part A discusses prehistoric earthquakes that occurred in eastern North America, northwestern Europe, and Australia, whereas a separate Part B deals with historical events.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Soper, Mary Ellen
1987-01-01
This discussion of the inclusion of descriptive cataloging as part of library education describes the descriptive cataloging segment of the curriculum at the University of Washington, including the sequence of courses and the content and objectives of each course. (CLB)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Banerjee, P.; Szabo, T.; Pierpaoli, E.; Franco, G.; Ortiz, M.; Oramas, A.; Tornello, B.
2018-01-01
We present a new galaxy cluster catalog constructed from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 9 (SDSS DR9) using an Adaptive Matched Filter (AMF) technique. Our catalog has 46,479 galaxy clusters with richness Λ200 > 20 in the redshift range 0.045 ≤ z < 0.641 in ∼11,500 deg2 of the sky. Angular position, richness, core and virial radii and redshift estimates for these clusters, as well as their error analysis, are provided as part of this catalog. In addition to the main version of the catalog, we also provide an extended version with a lower richness cut, containing 79,368 clusters. This version, in addition to the clusters in the main catalog, also contains those clusters (with richness 10 < Λ200 < 20) which have a one-to-one match in the DR8 catalog developed by Wen et al.(WHL). We obtain probabilities for cluster membership for each galaxy and implement several procedures for the identification and removal of false cluster detections. We cross-correlate the main AMF DR9 catalog with a number of cluster catalogs in different wavebands (Optical, X-ray). We compare our catalog with other SDSS-based ones such as the redMaPPer (26,350 clusters) and the Wen et al. (WHL) (132,684 clusters) in the same area of the sky and in the overlapping redshift range. We match 97% of the richest Abell clusters (Richness group 3), the same as WHL, while redMaPPer matches ∼ 90% of these clusters. Considering AMF DR9 richness bins, redMaPPer does not have one-to-one matches for 70% of our lowest richness clusters (20 < Λ200 < 40), while WHL matches 54% of these missed clusters (not present in redMaPPer). redMaPPer consistently does not possess one-to-one matches for ∼ 20% AMF DR9 clusters with Λ200 > 40, while WHL matches ≥ 70% of these missed clusters on average. For comparisons with X-ray clusters, we match the AMF catalog with BAX, MCXC and a combined catalog from NORAS and REFLEX. We consistently obtain a greater number of one-to-one matches for X-ray clusters across higher luminosity bins (Lx > 6 × 1044 ergs/sec) than redMaPPer while WHL matches the most clusters overall. For the most luminous clusters (Lx > 8), our catalog performs equivalently to WHL. This new catalog provides a wider sample than redMaPPer while retaining many fewer objects than WHL.
41 CFR 101-30.103-2 - Agency responsibilities.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-07-01
... the preparation and maintenance of the civil agency portion of the Federal Catalog System and in the... Regulations System FEDERAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS SUPPLY AND PROCUREMENT 30-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM 30... procedures of the Federal Catalog System as prescribed in this part 101-30. (b) Adherence by the Department...
41 CFR 101-30.103-2 - Agency responsibilities.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-07-01
... the preparation and maintenance of the civil agency portion of the Federal Catalog System and in the... Regulations System FEDERAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS SUPPLY AND PROCUREMENT 30-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM 30... procedures of the Federal Catalog System as prescribed in this part 101-30. (b) Adherence by the Department...
41 CFR 101-30.103-2 - Agency responsibilities.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-07-01
... the preparation and maintenance of the civil agency portion of the Federal Catalog System and in the... Regulations System FEDERAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS SUPPLY AND PROCUREMENT 30-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM 30... procedures of the Federal Catalog System as prescribed in this part 101-30. (b) Adherence by the Department...
41 CFR 101-30.103-2 - Agency responsibilities.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-07-01
... the preparation and maintenance of the civil agency portion of the Federal Catalog System and in the... Regulations System FEDERAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS SUPPLY AND PROCUREMENT 30-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM 30... procedures of the Federal Catalog System as prescribed in this part 101-30. (b) Adherence by the Department...
41 CFR 101-30.103-2 - Agency responsibilities.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-07-01
... the preparation and maintenance of the civil agency portion of the Federal Catalog System and in the... Regulations System FEDERAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS SUPPLY AND PROCUREMENT 30-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM 30... procedures of the Federal Catalog System as prescribed in this part 101-30. (b) Adherence by the Department...
National Water Quality Laboratory, 1995 services catalog
Timme, P.J.
1995-01-01
This Services Catalog contains information about field supplies and analytical services available from the National Water Quality Laboratory in Denver, Colo., and field supplies available from the Quality Water Service Unit in Ocala, Fla., to members of the U.S. Geological Survey. To assist personnel in the selection of analytical services, this catalog lists sample volume, required containers, applicable concentration range, detection level, precision of analysis, and preservation requirements for samples.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Setzler, Hubert H., Jr.; And Others
This Iberian Spanish Function Catalog presents sentences, phrases, and patterns organized by language functions and functional categories. This catalog is part of the communication/language objectives-based system (C/LOBS), which supports the front-end analysis efforts of the Defense Language Institute Foreign Language Center. The C/LOBS project,…
VizieR Online Data Catalog: FON Astrographic Catalogue Southern Part (FONAC-S) (Yuldoshev+, 2017)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yuldoshev, Q. X.; Ehgamberdiev, Sh. A.; Muminov, M. M.; Protsyuk, Yu. I.; Relke, H.; Andruk, V. M.
2018-04-01
The catalog of positions and B-magnitudes of near 13.4 million objects (FONAC-S) is presented. The catalog is a result of digitizing, image processing, and reduction of 1963 photographic plates of FON observational project from Kitab Observatory of Uzbekistan glass archive. (6 data files).
Lunar soils grain size catalog
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Graf, John C.
1993-01-01
This catalog compiles every available grain size distribution for Apollo surface soils, trench samples, cores, and Luna 24 soils. Original laboratory data are tabled, and cumulative weight distribution curves and histograms are plotted. Standard statistical parameters are calculated using the method of moments. Photos and location comments describe the sample environment and geological setting. This catalog can help researchers describe the geotechnical conditions and site variability of the lunar surface essential to the design of a lunar base.
User Requirements in Identifying Desired Works in a Large Library. Final Report.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Lipetz, Ben-Ami
Utilization of the card catalog in the main library (Sterling Memorial Library) of Yale University was studied over a period of more than a year. Traffic flow in the catalog was observed, and was used as the basis for scheduling interviews with a representative sample of catalog users at the moment of catalog use. More than 2000 interviews were…
VizieR Online Data Catalog: JCMT Gould Belt Survey: W40 complex (Rumble+, 2016)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Rumble, D.; Hatchell, J.; Pattle, K.; Kirk, H.; Wilson, T.; Buckle, J.; Berry, D. S.; Broekhoven-Fiene, H.; Currie, M. J.; Fich, M.; Jenness, T.; Johnstone, D.; Mottram, J. C.; Nutter, D.; Pineda, J. E.; Quinn, C.; Salji, C.; Tisi, S.; Walker-Smith, S.; di, Francesco J.; Hogerheijde, M. R.; Ward-Thompson, D.; Bastien, P.; Bresnahan, D.; Butner, H.; Chen, M.; Chrysostomou, A.; Coude, S.; Davis, C. J.; Drabek-Maunder, E.; Duarte-Cabral, A.; Fiege, J.; Friberg, P.; Friesen, R.; Fuller, G. A.; Graves, S.; Greaves, J.; Gregson, J.; Holland, W.; Joncas, G.; Kirk, J. M.; Knee, L. B. G.; Mairs, S.; Marsh, K.; Matthews, B. C.; Moriarty-Schieven, G.; Mowat, C.; Rawlings, J.; Richer, J.; Robertson, D.; Rosolowsky, E.; Sadavoy, S.; Thomas, H.; Tothill, N.; Viti, S.; White, G. J.; Wouterloot, J.; Yates, J.; Zhu, M.
2017-11-01
Aquila was observed with SCUBA-2 (Holland et al., 2013MNRAS.430.2513H) between 2012 April 21 and July 5 as part of the JCMT GBS MJLSG33 SCUBA-2 Serpens Campaign. Four separate fully sampled 30 arcmin diameter circular continuum observations (PONG1800 mapping mode) were taken simultaneously at 850um and 450um, and subsequently combined into mosaics. (3 data files).
CATALOG OF LIBRARY ACCESSIONS. SPEECH DEFECTS AND RELATED READINGS.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
FEARON, ROSS E.
PUBLICATIONS RELATED TO SPEECH PATHOLOGY AND AUDIOLOGY ARE LISTED SEQUENTIALLY BY DEWEY DECIMAL SYSTEM NUMBER OR VERTICAL FILE NUMBER. THE 266 BOOKS, PAMPHLETS, AND JOURNAL REPRINTS RANGE IN PUBLICATION DATE FROM 1892 TO 1966 AND ARE FROM THE MANTOR LIBRARY AT FARMINGTON STATE COLLEGE. THIS CATALOG IS PART OF A SERIES OF SUBJECT CATALOGS LISTING…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Setzler, Hubert H., Jr.; And Others
A Russian Function Catalog and Instructor and Advisor Rolebooks for Russian are presented. The catalog and rolebooks are part of the communication/language objectives-based system (C/LOBS), which supports the front-end analysis efforts of the Defense Language Institute Foreign Language Center. The C/LOBS projects, which is described in 13 volumes…
Wheeler, Russell L.
2014-01-01
Computation of probabilistic earthquake hazard requires an estimate of Mmax: the moment magnitude of the largest earthquake that is thought to be possible within a specified geographic region. The region specified in this report is the Central and Eastern United States and adjacent Canada. Parts A and B of this report describe the construction of a global catalog of moderate to large earthquakes that occurred worldwide in tectonic analogs of the Central and Eastern United States. Examination of histograms of the magnitudes of these earthquakes allows estimation of Central and Eastern United States Mmax. The catalog and Mmax estimates derived from it are used in the 2014 edition of the U.S. Geological Survey national seismic-hazard maps. Part A deals with prehistoric earthquakes, and this part deals with historical events.
MARINE SCIENCE FILM CATALOG. MOVIES, FILMSTRIPS, AND SLIDES.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
CHAPMAN, FRANK L.
THIS CATALOG CONTAINS ANNOTATED LISTINGS OF 16MM. FILMS, 35MM. FILMSTRIPS, AND 35MM. SLIDES FOR INSTRUCTIONAL USE IN THE MARINE SCIENCES. PARTS 1, 2, AND 3 LIST THOSE WHICH ARE AVAILABLE FROM THE CARTERET COUNTY MARINE SCIENCE PROJECT, AN ELEMENTARY AND SECONDARY EDUCATION ACT TITLE III PROJECT. PART 4 LISTS A-V MATERIALS AVAILABLE ON FREE LOAN…
Proposed Computer System for Library Catalog Maintenance. Part II: System Design.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Stein (Theodore) Co., New York, NY.
The logic of the system presented in this report is divided into six parts for computer processing and manipulation. They are: (1) processing of Library of Congress copy, (2) editing of input into standard format, (3) processing of information into and out from the authority files, (4) creation of the catalog records, (5) production of the…
Earth Resources Technology Satellite: US standard catalog No. U-12
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
1973-01-01
To provide dissemination of information regarding the availability of Earth Resources Technology Satellite (ERTS) imagery, a U.S. Standard Catalog is published on a monthly schedule. The catalogs identify imagery which has been processed and input to the data files during the preceding month. The U.S. Standard Catalog includes imagery covering the Continental United States, Alaska, and Hawaii. As a supplement to these catalogs, an inventory of ERTS imagery on 16 millimeter microfilm is available. The catalogs consist of four parts: (1) annotated maps which graphically depict the geographic areas covered by the imagery listed in the current catalog, (2) a computer-generated listing organized by observation identification number (D) with pertinent information on each image, (3) a computer listing of observations organized by longitude and latitude, and (4) observations which have had changes made in their catalog information since the original entry in the data base.
A catalog of stellar spectrophotometry
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Adelman, S. J.; Pyper, D. M.; Shore, S. N.; White, R. E.; Warren, W. H., Jr.
1989-01-01
A machine-readable catalog of stellar spectrophotometric measurements made with rotating grating scanner is introduced. Consideration is given to the processes by which the stellar data were collected and calibrated with the fluxes of Vega (Hayes and Latham, 1975). A sample page from the spectrophotometric catalog is presented.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Harmon, B. A.; Wilson, C. A.; Fishman, G. J.; Connaughton, V.; Henze, W.; Paciesas, W. S.; Finger, M. H.; McCollough, M. L.; Sahi, M.; Peterson, B.
2004-01-01
The Burst and Transient Source Experiment (BATSE), aboard the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory (CGRO), provided a record of the low-energy gamma-ray sky (approx. 20-1000 keV) between 1991 April and 2000 May (9.1 yr). BATSE monitored the high-energy sky using the Earth occultation technique (EOT) for point sources whose emission extended for times on the order of the CGRO orbital period (approx. 92 min) or greater. Using the EOT to extract flux information, a catalog of sources using data from the BATSE Large Area Detectors has been prepared. The first part of the catalog consists of results from the all-sky monitoring of 58 sources, mostly Galactic, with intrinsic variability on timescales of hours to years. For these sources, we have included tables of flux and spectral data, and outburst times for transients. Light curves (or flux histories) have been placed on the World Wide Web. We then performed a deep sampling of these 58 objects, plus a selection of 121 more objects, combining data from the entire 9.1 yr BATSE data set. Source types considered were primarily accreting binaries, but a small number of representative active galaxies, X-ray-emitting stars, and supernova remnants were also included. The sample represents a compilation of sources monitored and/or discovered with BATSE and other high-energy instruments between 1991 and 2000, known sources taken from the HEAO 1 A-4 and Macomb & Gehrels catalogs. The deep sample results include definite detections of 83 objects and possible detections of 36 additional objects. The definite detections spanned three classes of sources: accreting black hole and neutron star binaries, active galaxies, and Supernova remnants. The average fluxes measured for the fourth class, the X-ray emitting stars, were below the confidence limit for definite detection.
National Geological and Geophysical Data Preservation Program: Successes and Lessons Learned
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Adrian, B. M.
2014-12-01
The United States Geological Survey (USGS) is widely recognized in the earth science community as possessing extensive collections of geologic and geophysical materials gathered by its research personnel. Since the USGS was established in 1879, hundreds of thousands of samples have been gathered in collections that range from localized, geographically-based assemblages to ones that are national or international in scope. These materials include, but are not limited to, rock and mineral specimens; fossils; drill cores and cuttings; geochemical standards; and soil, sediment, and geochemical samples. The USGS National Geological and Geophysical Data Preservation Program (NGGDPP) was established with the passage of the Energy Policy Act of 2005. Since its implementation, the USGS NGGDPP has taken an active role in providing opportunities to inventory, archive and preserve geologic and geophysical samples, and to make these samples and ancillary data discoverable on the Internet. Preserving endangered geoscience collections is more cost effective than recollecting this information. Preserving these collections, however, is only one part of the process - there also needs to be a means to facilitate open discovery and access to the physical objects and the ancillary digital records. The NGGDPP has celebrated successes such as the development of the USGS Geologic Collections Management System (GCMS), a master catalog and collections management plan, and the implementation and advancement of the National Digital Catalog, a digital inventory and catalog of geological and geophysical data and collections held by the USGS and State geological surveys. Over this period of time there has been many lessons learned. With the successes and lessons learned, NGGDPP is poised to take on challenges the future may bring.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: FON Astrographic Catalogue, Version 3.0 (Andruk+, 2016)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Andruk, V. M.; Pakuliak, L. K.; Golovnia, V. V.; Ivanov, G. O.; Yatsenko, A. I.; Shatokhina, S. V.; Yizhakevych, O. M.
2017-11-01
A catalog of positions and B-magnitudes of 19 million objects (FONAC V3.0) is presented. The catalog is a result of digitizing, image processing, and reduction of 2260 photographic plates of FON observational project from MAO NAS of Ukraine glass archive, which is the part of the UkrVO national project. (94 data files).
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Setzler, Hubert H., Jr.; And Others
A Mandarin Chinese Function Catalog and Instructor Rolebook for Mandarin Chinese are presented. The catalog and rolebook are part of the communication/language objectives-based system (C/LOBS), which supports the front-end analysis efforts of the Defense Language Institute Foreign Language Center. The C/LOBS project, which is described in 13…
Common Parts Catalog for Industry Shipyards
2012-01-01
U.S. marine industry. *^^ DEFENSE STANDARDIZATION PROGRAM CASE STUDY Common Parts Catalog for Industry Shipyards BACKGROUND Tin* CPC is a...surface ships and submarines. A success story for submarines was documented in an earlier I >SP case study, Tfw Virginia Class Submarine Program ...be saved through focused and disciplined standardization.The accomplishments documented m The Virginia Class Submarine Program case study provided a
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lee, H.; Sheen, D.; Kim, S.
2013-12-01
The b-value in Gutenberg-Richter relation is an important parameter widely used not only in the interpretation of regional tectonic structure but in the seismic hazard analysis. In this study, we tested four methods for estimating the stable b-value in a small number of events using Monte-Carlo method. One is the Least-Squares method (LSM) which minimizes the observation error. Others are based on the Maximum Likelihood method (MLM) which maximizes the likelihood function: Utsu's (1965) method for continuous magnitudes and an infinite maximum magnitude, Page's (1968) for continuous magnitudes and a finite maximum magnitude, and Weichert's (1980) for interval magnitude and a finite maximum magnitude. A synthetic parent population of the earthquake catalog of million events from magnitude 2.0 to 7.0 with interval of 0.1 was generated for the Monte-Carlo simulation. The sample, the number of which was increased from 25 to 1000, was extracted from the parent population randomly. The resampling procedure was applied 1000 times with different random seed numbers. The mean and the standard deviation of the b-value were estimated for each sample group that has the same number of samples. As expected, the more samples were used, the more stable b-value was obtained. However, in a small number of events, the LSM gave generally low b-value with a large standard deviation while other MLMs gave more accurate and stable values. It was found that Utsu (1965) gives the most accurate and stable b-value even in a small number of events. It was also found that the selection of the minimum magnitude could be critical for estimating the correct b-value for Utsu's (1965) method and Page's (1968) if magnitudes were binned into an interval. Therefore, we applied Utsu (1965) to estimate the b-value using two instrumental earthquake catalogs, which have events occurred around the southern part of the Korean Peninsula from 1978 to 2011. By a careful choice of the minimum magnitude, the b-values of the earthquake catalogs of the Korea Meteorological Administration and Kim (2012) are estimated to be 0.72 and 0.74, respectively.
Properties of galaxies around the most massive SMBHs
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Shirasaki, Yuji; Komiya, Yutaka; Ohishi, Masatoshi; Mizumoto, Yoshihiko
2015-08-01
We present result of the clustering analysis performed between AGNs and galaxies. AGN samples with redshift 0.1 - 1.0 were extracted from AGN properties catalogs which contain virial mass estimates of SMBHs. Galaxy samples were extracted from SDSS DR8 catalog and UKIDSS DR9 LAS catalog. The catalogs of SDSS and UKIDSS were merged and used to estimate the IR-opt color and IR magnitude in the rest frame by SED fitting. As we had no redshift information on the galaxy samples, stacking method was applied. We investigated the BH mass dependence of cross correlation length, red galaxy fraction at their environment, and luminosity function of galaxies. We found that the cross correlation length increase above M_BH >= 10^{8.2} Msol, and red galaxies dominate the environment of AGNs with M_BH >= 10^{9} Msol. This result indicates that the most massive SMBHs are mainly fueled by accretion of hot halo gas.
Properties of galaxies around the most massive SMBHs
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Shirasaki, Yuji; Komiya, Yutaka; Ohishi, Masatoshi; Mizumoto, Yoshihiko
We present result of the clustering analysis performed between AGNs and galaxies. AGN samples with redshift 0.1-1.0 were extracted from AGN properties catalogs which contain virial mass estimates of SMBHs. Galaxy samples were extracted from SDSS DR8 catalog and UKIDSS DR9 LAS catalog. The catalogs of SDSS and UKIDSS were merged and used to estimate the IR-opt color and IR magnitude in the rest frame by SED fitting. As we had no redshift information on the galaxy samples, stacking method was applied. We investigated the BH mass dependence of cross correlation length, red galaxy fraction at their environment, and luminosity function of galaxies. We found that the cross correlation length increase above M BH >= 108.2 M ⊙, and red galaxies dominate the environment of AGNs with M BH >= 109 M ⊙. This result indicates that the most massive SMBHs are mainly fueled by accretion of hot halo gas.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Adamich, Tom
2009-01-01
While teacher-librarians embrace the concept of equitable access when they select "multicultural" materials to include in their collections, plan special programs, and teach lessons on a variety of topics, what do they do to make equitable access a part of their online catalogs? Have they achieved (or nearly achieved) a consistent level of…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Documentation Research and Training Centre, Bangalore (India).
The four sections of the report cover the topics of cataloging, subject analysis, documentation systems for industry and the Documentation Research and Training Centre (DRTC) research report for 1970. The cataloging section covers the conflicts of cataloging, recall, corporate bodies, titles, publishers series and the entity name. The subject…
The Chandra Source Catalog: Storage and Interfaces
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
van Stone, David; Harbo, Peter N.; Tibbetts, Michael S.; Zografou, Panagoula; Evans, Ian N.; Primini, Francis A.; Glotfelty, Kenny J.; Anderson, Craig S.; Bonaventura, Nina R.; Chen, Judy C.; Davis, John E.; Doe, Stephen M.; Evans, Janet D.; Fabbiano, Giuseppina; Galle, Elizabeth C.; Gibbs, Danny G., II; Grier, John D.; Hain, Roger; Hall, Diane M.; He, Xiang Qun (Helen); Houck, John C.; Karovska, Margarita; Kashyap, Vinay L.; Lauer, Jennifer; McCollough, Michael L.; McDowell, Jonathan C.; Miller, Joseph B.; Mitschang, Arik W.; Morgan, Douglas L.; Mossman, Amy E.; Nichols, Joy S.; Nowak, Michael A.; Plummer, David A.; Refsdal, Brian L.; Rots, Arnold H.; Siemiginowska, Aneta L.; Sundheim, Beth A.; Winkelman, Sherry L.
2009-09-01
The Chandra Source Catalog (CSC) is part of the Chandra Data Archive (CDA) at the Chandra X-ray Center. The catalog contains source properties and associated data objects such as images, spectra, and lightcurves. The source properties are stored in relational databases and the data objects are stored in files with their metadata stored in databases. The CDA supports different versions of the catalog: multiple fixed release versions and a live database version. There are several interfaces to the catalog: CSCview, a graphical interface for building and submitting queries and for retrieving data objects; a command-line interface for property and source searches using ADQL; and VO-compliant services discoverable though the VO registry. This poster describes the structure of the catalog and provides an overview of the interfaces.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
International Business Machines Corp., Gaithersburg, MD. Data Processing Div.
The Ohio State University Libraries On-line Remote Catalog Access and Circulation Control System (LCS) began on-line operations with the conversion of one department library in November 1970. By December all 26 libraries had been converted to the automated system and LCS was fully operational one month ahead of schedule. LCS is designed as a…
Increasing Access to Archival Records in Library Online Public Access Catalogs.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Gilmore, Matthew B.
1988-01-01
Looks at the use of online public access catalogs, the utility of subject and call-number searching, and possible archival applications. The Wallace Archives at the Claremont Colleges is used as an example of the availability of bibliographic descriptions of multiformat archival materials through the library catalog. Sample records and searches…
Earth Resources Technology Satellite: Non-US standard catalog No. N-13
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
1973-01-01
To provide dissemination of information regarding the availability of Earth Resources Technology Satellite (ERTS) imagery, a Non-U.S. Standard Catalog is published on a monthly schedule. The catalogs identify imagery which has been processed and input to the data files during the preceding month. The Non-U.S. Standard Catalog includes imagery covering all areas except that of the United States, Hawaii, and Alaska. Imagery adjacent to the Continental U.S. and Alaska borders will normally appear in the U.S. Standard Catalog. As a supplement to these catalogs, an inventory of ERTS imagery on 16 millimeter microfilm is available. The catalogs consist of four parts: (1) annotated maps which graphically depict the geographic areas covered by the imagery listed in the current catalog, (2) a computer-generated listing organized by observation identification number (ID) with pertinent information for each image, (3) a computer listing of observations organized by longitude and latitude, and (4) observations which have had changes made in their catalog information since the original entry in the data base.
Catalogs of Space Shuttle earth observations photography
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Lulla, Kamlesh; Helfert, Michael
1990-01-01
A review is presented of postflight cataloging and indexing activities of mission data obtained from Space Shuttle earth observations photography. Each Space Shuttle mission acquires 1300-4400 photographs of the earth that are reviewed and interpreted by a team of photointerpreters and cataloging specialists. Every photograph's manual and electronic set of plots is compared for accuracy of its locational coordinates. This cataloging activity is a critical and principal part of postflight activity and ensures that the database is accurate, updated and consequently made meaningful for further utilization in the applications and research communities. A final product in the form of a Catalog of Space Shuttle Earth Observations Handheld Photography is published for users of this database.
Catalog of Tephra Samples from Kilauea's Summit Eruption, March-December 2008
Wooten, Kelly M.; Thornber, Carl R.; Orr, Tim R.; Ellis, Jennifer F.; Trusdell, Frank A.
2009-01-01
The opening of a new vent within Halema'uma'u Crater in March 2008 ended a 26-year period of no eruptive activity at the summit of Kilauea Volcano. It also heralded the first explosive activity at Kilauea's summit since 1924 and the first of eight discrete explosive events in 2008. At the onset of the eruption, the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory (HVO) initiated a rigorous program of sample collection to provide a temporally constrained suite of tephra samples for petrographic, geochemical, and isotopic studies. Petrologic studies help us understand conditions of magma generation at depth; processes related to transport, storage, and mixing of magma within the shallow summit region; and specific circumstances leading to explosive eruptions. This report provides a catalog of tephra samples erupted at Kilauea's summit from March 19, 2008, through the end of 2008. The Kilauea 2008 Summit Sample Catalog is tabulated in the accompanying Microsoft Excel file, of2009-1134.xls (four file types linked on right). The worksheet in this file provides sampling information and sample descriptions. Contextual information for this catalog is provided below and includes (1) a narrative of 2008 summit eruptive activity, (2) a description of sample collection methods, (3) a scheme for characterizing a diverse range in tephra lithology, and (4) an explanation of each category of sample information (column headers) in the Microsoft Excel worksheet.
Decal Process Document and Catalog
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
1999-01-01
The Decal Process Document and Catalog, JSC 27260 is the standard flight decal catalog, complete with illustrations and part numbers. As hardware developers identify labels that have common applicability across end items, these labels can be evaluated for "standard decal classification" and entered into the decal catalog for general use. The hardware developer must have a label design that meets current, applicable labeling requirements, and submit to the Decal Design and Production Facility (DDPF) as a standard label candidate. Upon approval, the label will be added to the decal catalog. The Decal Process Document and Catalog provides a selection of decals from which the NASA and NASA contractor customers can easily order. The decals shown in the catalog have been previously produced and have released engineering/fabrication drawings on file in the (DDPF). A released drawing is required before a decal can be produced or placed into the catalog. Some decals included in the catalog have a common applicability and are used in various NASA vehicles/habitats. It is the intent of the DDPF to maintain this catalog as a "living document" to which decals/placards can be added as they are repeatedly used. The advantage of identifYing flight decals in this catalog is that a released drawing is already in place, and the products will be flight certified.
The 105 month Swift-BAT data release
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Oh, Kyuseok; Koss, Michael; Markwardt, Craig B.; Schawinski, Kevin; Baumgartner, Wayne H.; Barthelmy, Scott D.; Cenko, Bradley; Gehrels, Neil; Mushotzky, Richard; Petulante, Abigail; Ricci, Claudio; Lien, Amy; Trakhtenbrot, Benny; NASA GSFC Swift BAT team, BAT AGN Spectroscopic Survey (BASS)
2018-01-01
We present a new catalog of hard X-ray sources detected in the first 105 months of observations with the Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) on board the Swift observatory. The 105 month Swift-BAT survey is a uniform hard X-ray all-sky survey with a sensitivity of 8.40×10-12 erg s-1 cm-2 over 90% of the sky and 7.24×10-12 erg s-1 cm-2 over 50% of the sky in the 14‑195 keV band. The Swift-BAT 105 month catalog provides 1632 (422 new detections) hard X-ray sources in the 14 ‑ 195 keV band above the 4.8σ significance level. Adding to the previously known hard X-ray sources, 34% (144/422) of the new detections are identified as Seyfert AGN in nearby galaxies (z < 0.2). The majority of the remaining identified sources are X-ray binaries (7%, 31) and blazars/BL Lac objects (10%, 43). As part of this new edition of the Swift-BAT catalog, we release eight-channel spectra and monthly sampled light curves for each object in the online journal and at the Swift-BAT 105 month Web site.
Measurements of WDS Objects Found in Images Taken for Detecting CPM Pairs in the LSPM Catalog
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Knapp, Wilfried; Nanson, John
2017-10-01
During our research for CPM objects in the LSPM catalog so far not included in the WDS catalog part II (Knapp and Nanson 2017) we found by chance a surprisingly large number of WDS objects in the field of view of several images taken for this project. To use the existing image material in the best possible way we decided to take measurements of these objects and to look at other existing catalog data allowing a check for potential common proper motion. This report presents the findings of this research.
Nuclear Fuel Cycle Options Catalog: FY16 Improvements and Additions
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Price, Laura L.; Barela, Amanda Crystal; Schetnan, Richard Reed
2016-08-31
The United States Department of Energy, Office of Nuclear Energy, Fuel Cycle Technology Program sponsors nuclear fuel cycle research and development. As part of its Fuel Cycle Options campaign, the DOE has established the Nuclear Fuel Cycle Options Catalog. The catalog is intended for use by the Fuel Cycle Technologies Program in planning its research and development activities and disseminating information regarding nuclear energy to interested parties. The purpose of this report is to document the improvements and additions that have been made to the Nuclear Fuel Cycle Options Catalog in the 2016 fiscal year.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Stellar parameters of KIC planet-host stars (Bastien+, 2014)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Bastien, F. A.; Stassun, K. G.; Pepper, J.
2017-07-01
We draw our bright KOI sample from the NASA Exoplanet Archive (NEA; Akeson et al. 2013PASP..125..989A) accessed on 2014 January 7. We restrict the sample to stars with 6650 K>Teff>4500 K, the Teff range for which F8 is calibrated. We exclude 28 stars with overall range of photometric variability >10 ppt (parts per thousand), as phenomena in the light curves of such chromospherically active stars can boost the measured F8 and thus result in an erroneous F8-based log g. These excluded stars (10% of the sample) are cooler than average for the overall sample, as expected given their large variability. Our sample after applying these cuts contains 289 stars (407 KOIs). (1 data file).
Probing the Small-scale Structure in Strongly Lensed Systems via Transdimensional Inference
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Daylan, Tansu; Cyr-Racine, Francis-Yan; Diaz Rivero, Ana; Dvorkin, Cora; Finkbeiner, Douglas P.
2018-02-01
Strong lensing is a sensitive probe of the small-scale density fluctuations in the Universe. We implement a pipeline to model strongly lensed systems using probabilistic cataloging, which is a transdimensional, hierarchical, and Bayesian framework to sample from a metamodel (union of models with different dimensionality) consistent with observed photon count maps. Probabilistic cataloging allows one to robustly characterize modeling covariances within and across lens models with different numbers of subhalos. Unlike traditional cataloging of subhalos, it does not require model subhalos to improve the goodness of fit above the detection threshold. Instead, it allows the exploitation of all information contained in the photon count maps—for instance, when constraining the subhalo mass function. We further show that, by not including these small subhalos in the lens model, fixed-dimensional inference methods can significantly mismodel the data. Using a simulated Hubble Space Telescope data set, we show that the subhalo mass function can be probed even when many subhalos in the sample catalogs are individually below the detection threshold and would be absent in a traditional catalog. The implemented software, Probabilistic Cataloger (PCAT) is made publicly available at https://github.com/tdaylan/pcat.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: BOSS narrow CIV absorption lines. II. zem>2.4 (Chen+, 2014)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Chen, Z.-F.; Qin, Y.-P.; Qin, M.; Pan, C.-J.; Pan, D.-S.
2015-01-01
We identify absorption doublets, such as CIVλλ1548,1551 in the quasar spectra of the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS), which is a part of the SDSS-III (Eisenstein et al. 2011AJ....142...72E). This work continues the analysis of Paper I (Chen+, 2014, J/ApJS/210/7; 2014ApJS..212...17C) by expanding the quasar sample to those quasars with zem>2.4. (1 data file).
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Chandra sources in 5 galaxy clusters (Martel+, 2007)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Martel, A. R.; Menanteau, F.; Tozzi, P.; Ford, H. C.; Infante, L.
2009-08-01
All five clusters of the sample were observed as part of the ACS GTO programs 9290 and 9919 in Cycles 11 and 12. Chandra observations were made for RX J0152-1357 was observed on 2000 Sep 8, RX J0849+4452 on 2000 May 3-4, RDCS J0910+5422 on 2001 Apr 24 and 28, MS 1054-0321 on 2000 Apr 21, and RDCS J1252-2927 on 2003 Mar 18 and 20. (1 data file).
Aligning HST Images to Gaia: A Faster Mosaicking Workflow
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Bajaj, V.
2017-11-01
We present a fully programmatic workflow for aligning HST images using the high-quality astrometry provided by Gaia Data Release 1. Code provided in a Jupyter Notebook works through this procedure, including parsing the data to determine the query area parameters, querying Gaia for the coordinate catalog, and using the catalog with TweakReg as reference catalog. This workflow greatly simplifies the normally time-consuming process of aligning HST images, especially those taken as part of mosaics.
Update of membership and mean proper motion of open clusters from UCAC5 catalog
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Dias, W. S.; Monteiro, H.; Assafin, M.
2018-06-01
We present mean proper motions and membership probabilities of individual stars for optically visible open clusters, which have been determined using data from the UCAC5 catalog. This follows our previous studies with the UCAC2 and UCAC4 catalogs, but now using improved proper motions in the GAIA reference frame. In the present study results were obtained for a sample of 1108 open clusters. For five clusters, this is the first determination of mean proper motion, and for the whole sample, we present results with a much larger number of identified astrometric member stars than on previous studies. It is the last update of our Open cluster Catalog based on proper motion data only. Future updates will count on astrometric, photometric and spectroscopic GAIA data as input for analyses.
A Gaia DR2 Mock Stellar Catalog
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Rybizki, Jan; Demleitner, Markus; Fouesneau, Morgan; Bailer-Jones, Coryn; Rix, Hans-Walter; Andrae, René
2018-07-01
We present a mock catalog of Milky Way stars, matching in volume and depth the content of the Gaia data release 2 (GDR2). We generated our catalog using Galaxia, a tool to sample stars from a Besançon Galactic model, together with a realistic 3D dust extinction map. The catalog mimics the complete GDR2 data model and contains most of the entries in the Gaia source catalog: five-parameter astrometry, three-band photometry, radial velocities, stellar parameters, and associated scaled nominal uncertainty estimates. In addition, we supplemented the catalog with extinctions and photometry for non-Gaia bands. This catalog can be used to prepare GDR2 queries in a realistic runtime environment, and it can serve as a Galactic model against which to compare the actual GDR2 data in the space of observables. The catalog is hosted through the virtual observatory GAVO’s Heidelberg data center (http://dc.g-vo.org/tableinfo/gdr2mock.main) service, and thus can be queried using ADQL as for GDR2 data.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Harmon, B. A.; Wilson, C. A.; Fishman, G. J.; Connaughton, V.; Henze, W.; Paciesas, W. S.; Finger, M. H.; McCollough, M. L.; Sahi, M.; Peterson, B.
2003-01-01
The Burst and Transient Source Experiment (BATSE), aboard the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory (CGRO), provided a record of the low-energy gamma-ray sky (approx. 20-1000 keV) between 1991 April and 2000 May (9.1y). BATSE monitored the high energy sky using the Earth occultation technique (EOT) for point sources whose emission extended for times on the order of the CGRO orbital period (approx. 92m) or greater. Using the EOT to extract flux - 2 - information, a catalog of sources using data from the BATSE large area detectors has been prepared. The first part of the catalog consists of results from the all-sky monitoring of 58 sources, mostly Galactic, with intrinsic variability on timescales of hours to years. For these sources, we have included tables of flux and spectral data, and outburst times for transients. Light curves (or flux histories) covering the entire nine mission are being placed on the world wide web. We then performed a deep-sampling of these 58 objects, plus a selection of 121 more objects, combining data from the entire 9.ly BATSE dataset. Source types considered were primarily accreting binaries, but a small number of representative active galaxies, X-ray-emitting stars, and supernova remnants were also included. The sample represents a compilation of sources monitored and/or discovered with BATSE and other high energy instruments between 1991 and 2000, known sources taken from the HEAO 1 A-4 (Levine et al. 1984) and Macomb and Gehrels (1999) catalogs. The deep sample results include definite detections of 82 objects and possible detections of 36 additional objects. The definite detections spanned three classes of sources: accreting black hole and neutron star binaries, active galaxies and supernova remnants. The average fluxes measured for the fourth class, the X-ray emitting stars, were below the confidence limit for definite detection. Flux data for the deep sample are presented in four energy bands: 20-40, 40-70, 70-160, and 160-430 keV. The limiting average flux level (9.1 y) for the sample varies from 3.5 to 20 mCrab (5delta) between 20 and 430 keV, depending on systematic error, which in turn is primarily dependent on the sky location. To strengthen the credibility of detection of weaker sources (approx.5-25 mCrab), we generated Earth occultation images, searched for periodic behavior using FFT and epoch folding methods, and critically evaluated the energy-dependent emission in the four flux bands. The deep sample results are intended for guidance in performing future all-sky surveys or pointed observations in the hard X-ray and low-energy gamma-ray band, as well as more detailed studies with the BATSE EOT.
DIRAC File Replica and Metadata Catalog
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Tsaregorodtsev, A.; Poss, S.
2012-12-01
File replica and metadata catalogs are essential parts of any distributed data management system, which are largely determining its functionality and performance. A new File Catalog (DFC) was developed in the framework of the DIRAC Project that combines both replica and metadata catalog functionality. The DFC design is based on the practical experience with the data management system of the LHCb Collaboration. It is optimized for the most common patterns of the catalog usage in order to achieve maximum performance from the user perspective. The DFC supports bulk operations for replica queries and allows quick analysis of the storage usage globally and for each Storage Element separately. It supports flexible ACL rules with plug-ins for various policies that can be adopted by a particular community. The DFC catalog allows to store various types of metadata associated with files and directories and to perform efficient queries for the data based on complex metadata combinations. Definition of file ancestor-descendent relation chains is also possible. The DFC catalog is implemented in the general DIRAC distributed computing framework following the standard grid security architecture. In this paper we describe the design of the DFC and its implementation details. The performance measurements are compared with other grid file catalog implementations. The experience of the DFC Catalog usage in the CLIC detector project are discussed.
OLAP Cube Visualization of Hydrologic Data Catalogs
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Zaslavsky, I.; Rodriguez, M.; Beran, B.; Valentine, D.; van Ingen, C.; Wallis, J. C.
2007-12-01
As part of the CUAHSI Hydrologic Information System project, we assemble comprehensive observations data catalogs that support CUAHSI data discovery services (WaterOneFlow services) and online mapping interfaces (e.g. the Data Access System for Hydrology, DASH). These catalogs describe several nation-wide data repositories that are important for hydrologists, including USGS NWIS and EPA STORET data collections. The catalogs contain a wealth of information reflecting the entire history and geography of hydrologic observations in the US. Managing such catalogs requires high performance analysis and visualization technologies. OLAP (Online Analytical Processing) cube, often called data cubes, is an approach to organizing and querying large multi-dimensional data collections. We have applied the OLAP techniques, as implemented in Microsoft SQL Server 2005, to the analysis of the catalogs from several agencies. In this initial report, we focus on the OLAP technology as applied to catalogs, and preliminary results of the analysis. Specifically, we describe the challenges of generating OLAP cube dimensions, and defining aggregations and views for data catalogs as opposed to observations data themselves. The initial results are related to hydrologic data availability from the observations data catalogs. The results reflect geography and history of available data totals from USGS NWIS and EPA STORET repositories, and spatial and temporal dynamics of available measurements for several key nutrient-related parameters.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
International Federation of Library Associations, The Hague (Netherlands).
Papers on bibliography, cataloging, and classification presented at the 1984 IFLA general conference include: (1) "Bibliographic Control: Zimbabwe's Present Practices and Hopes for the Future" (Angeline S. Kamba, Zimbabwe); (2) "Classification and Subject Cataloguing in Kenya" (Margaret N. Muriuki, Kenya); (3)…
A Feasibility Study on Data Distribution on Optical Media.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Campbell (Bonnie) & Associates, Toronto (Ontario).
This feasibility study assesses the potential of optical technology in the development of accessible bibliographic and location data networks both in Canada and within the international MARC (Machine-Readable Cataloging) network. The study is divided into four parts: (1) a market survey of cataloging and interlibrary loan librarians to determine…
The Digital Sample: Metadata, Unique Identification, and Links to Data and Publications
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lehnert, K. A.; Vinayagamoorthy, S.; Djapic, B.; Klump, J.
2006-12-01
A significant part of digital data in the Geosciences refers to physical samples of Earth materials, from igneous rocks to sediment cores to water or gas samples. The application and long-term utility of these sample-based data in research is critically dependent on (a) the availability of information (metadata) about the samples such as geographical location and time of sampling, or sampling method, (b) links between the different data types available for individual samples that are dispersed in the literature and in digital data repositories, and (c) access to the samples themselves. Major problems for achieving this include incomplete documentation of samples in publications, use of ambiguous sample names, and the lack of a central catalog that allows to find a sample's archiving location. The International Geo Sample Number IGSN, managed by the System for Earth Sample Registration SESAR, provides solutions for these problems. The IGSN is a unique persistent identifier for samples and other GeoObjects that can be obtained by submitting sample metadata to SESAR (www.geosamples.org). If data in a publication is referenced to an IGSN (rather than an ambiguous sample name), sample metadata can readily be extracted from the SESAR database, which evolves into a Global Sample Catalog that also allows to locate the owner or curator of the sample. Use of the IGSN in digital data systems allows building linkages between distributed data. SESAR is contributing to the development of sample metadata standards. SESAR will integrate the IGSN in persistent, resolvable identifiers based on the handle.net service to advance direct linkages between the digital representation of samples in SESAR (sample profiles) and their related data in the literature and in web-accessible digital data repositories. Technologies outlined by Klump et al. (this session) such as the automatic creation of ontologies by text mining applications will be explored for harvesting identifiers of publications and datasets that contain information about a specific sample in order to establish comprehensive data profiles for samples.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ishkov, V. N.; Zabarinskaya, L. P.; Sergeeva, N. A.
2017-11-01
The development of studies of solar sources and their effects on the state of the near-Earth space required systematization of the corresponding information in the form of databases and catalogs for the entire time of observation of any geoeffective phenomenon that includes, if possible at the time of creation, all of the characteristics of the phenomena themselves and the sources of these phenomena on the Sun. A uniform presentation of information in the form of a series of similar catalogs that cover long time intervals is of particular importance. The large amount of information collected in such catalogs makes it necessary to use modern methods of its organization and presentation that allow a transition between individual parts of the catalog and a quick search for necessary events and their characteristics, which is implemented in the presented Catalog of Solar Proton Events in the 23rd Cycle of Solar Activity of the sequence of catalogs (six separate issues) that cover the period from 1970 to 2009 (20th-23rd solar cycles).
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Bizyaev, D. V.; Kautsch, S. J.; Mosenkov, A. V.
We present a catalog of true edge-on disk galaxies automatically selected from the Seventh Data Release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). A visual inspection of the g, r, and i images of about 15,000 galaxies allowed us to split the initial sample of edge-on galaxy candidates into 4768 (31.8% of the initial sample) genuine edge-on galaxies, 8350 (55.7%) non-edge-on galaxies, and 1865 (12.5%) edge-on galaxies not suitable for simple automatic analysis because these objects either show signs of interaction and warps, or nearby bright stars project on it. We added more candidate galaxies from RFGC, EFIGI, RC3, andmore » Galaxy Zoo catalogs found in the SDSS footprints. Our final sample consists of 5747 genuine edge-on galaxies. We estimate the structural parameters of the stellar disks (the stellar disk thickness, radial scale length, and central surface brightness) in the galaxies by analyzing photometric profiles in each of the g, r, and i images. We also perform simplified three-dimensional modeling of the light distribution in the stellar disks of edge-on galaxies from our sample. Our large sample is intended to be used for studying scaling relations in the stellar disks and bulges and for estimating parameters of the thick disks in different types of galaxies via the image stacking. In this paper, we present the sample selection procedure and general description of the sample.« less
The 105-Month Swift-BAT All-Sky Hard X-Ray Survey
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Oh, Kyuseok; Koss, Michael; Markwardt, Craig B.; Schawinski, Kevin; Baumgartner, Wayne H.; Barthelmy, Scott D.; Cenko, S. Bradley; Gehrels, Neil; Mushotzky, Richard; Petulante, Abigail;
2018-01-01
We present a catalog of hard X-ray sources detected in the first 105 months of observations with the Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) coded-mask imager on board the Swift observatory. The 105-month Swift-BAT survey is a uniform hard X-ray all-sky survey with a sensitivity of 8.40 x 10(exp -12) erg s(exp -1) cm(exp -2) over 90% of the sky and 7.24 x 10(exp -12) erg s(exp -1) cm(exp -2) over 50% of the sky in the 14-195 keV band. The Swift-BAT 105-month catalog provides 1632 (422 new detections) hard X-ray sources in the 14-195 keV band above the 4.8 sigma significance level. Adding to the previously known hard X-ray sources, 34% (144/422) of the new detections are identified as Seyfert active galactic nuclei (AGNs) in nearby galaxies (z < 0.2). The majority of the remaining identified sources are X-ray binaries (7%, 31) and blazars/BL Lac objects (10%, 43). As part of this new edition of the Swift-BAT catalog, we release eight-channel spectra and monthly sampled light curves for each object in the online journal and at the Swift-BAT 105-month website.
The 105-Month Swift-BAT All-sky Hard X-Ray Survey
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Oh, Kyuseok; Koss, Michael; Markwardt, Craig B.; Schawinski, Kevin; Baumgartner, Wayne H.; Barthelmy, Scott D.; Cenko, S. Bradley; Gehrels, Neil; Mushotzky, Richard; Petulante, Abigail; Ricci, Claudio; Lien, Amy; Trakhtenbrot, Benny
2018-03-01
We present a catalog of hard X-ray sources detected in the first 105 months of observations with the Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) coded-mask imager on board the Swift observatory. The 105-month Swift-BAT survey is a uniform hard X-ray all-sky survey with a sensitivity of 8.40× {10}-12 {erg} {{{s}}}-1 {cm}}-2 over 90% of the sky and 7.24× {10}-12 {erg} {{{s}}}-1 {cm}}-2 over 50% of the sky in the 14–195 keV band. The Swift-BAT 105-month catalog provides 1632 (422 new detections) hard X-ray sources in the 14–195 keV band above the 4.8σ significance level. Adding to the previously known hard X-ray sources, 34% (144/422) of the new detections are identified as Seyfert active galactic nuclei (AGNs) in nearby galaxies (z< 0.2). The majority of the remaining identified sources are X-ray binaries (7%, 31) and blazars/BL Lac objects (10%, 43). As part of this new edition of the Swift-BAT catalog, we release eight-channel spectra and monthly sampled light curves for each object in the online journal and at the Swift-BAT 105-month website.
THE 70 MONTH SWIFT-BAT ALL-SKY HARD X-RAY SURVEY
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Baumgartner, W. H.; Tueller, J.; Markwardt, C. B.
2013-08-15
We present the catalog of sources detected in 70 months of observations with the Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) hard X-ray detector on the Swift gamma-ray burst observatory. The Swift-BAT 70 month survey has detected 1171 hard X-ray sources (more than twice as many sources as the previous 22 month survey) in the 14-195 keV band down to a significance level of 4.8{sigma}, associated with 1210 counterparts. The 70 month Swift-BAT survey is the most sensitive and uniform hard X-ray all-sky survey and reaches a flux level of 1.03 Multiplication-Sign 10{sup -11} erg s{sup -1} cm{sup -2} over 50% of themore » sky and 1.34 Multiplication-Sign 10{sup -11} erg s{sup -1} cm{sup -2} over 90% of the sky. The majority of new sources in the 70 month survey continue to be active galactic nuclei, with over 700 in the catalog. As part of this new edition of the Swift-BAT catalog, we also make available eight-channel spectra and monthly sampled light curves for each object detected in the survey in the online journal and at the Swift-BAT 70 month Web site.« less
Catalog of solar wind events identified from observations by ISTP spacecraft
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Peredo, M.; Berdichevsky, D.; Byrnes, J.; Lepping, R. P.; Ogilvie, K.; Lazarus, A. J.; Paularena, K. I.; Steinberg, J. T.
1995-01-01
The ISTP Science Planning and Operations Facility (SPOF), in collaboration with ISTP investigators, is developing a catalog of solar wind events and features. The catalog is primarily based on plasma and magnetic field observations from the WIND and IMP-8 spacecraft. Interplanetary events that may trigger magnetospheric activity are included as well as features of interest for using the solar wind as a plasma laboratory. Catalog coverage begins on September 8, 1992, the start of ISTP science data collection. The catalog is based on Key Parameter data sets (preliminary summary data at approximately 1 min time resolution produced quickly for survey purposes) and as such has limited citability in formal scientific work. Its primary intent is to serve as a reference for identifying candidate periods for further study, such as may be the focus of coordinated data analysis efforts during ISTP and/or IACG Science Campaigns. To facilitate access by members of the ISTP and wider space physics communities, the catalog will be available on the World Wide Web. The contents of the catalog will be described, and samples of catalog information will be presented.
THE DEEP2 GALAXY REDSHIFT SURVEY: THE VORONOI-DELAUNAY METHOD CATALOG OF GALAXY GROUPS
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Gerke, Brian F.; Newman, Jeffrey A.; Davis, Marc
2012-05-20
We present a public catalog of galaxy groups constructed from the spectroscopic sample of galaxies in the fourth data release from the Deep Extragalactic Evolutionary Probe 2 (DEEP2) Galaxy Redshift Survey, including the Extended Groth Strip (EGS). The catalog contains 1165 groups with two or more members in the EGS over the redshift range 0 < z < 1.5 and 1295 groups at z > 0.6 in the rest of DEEP2. Twenty-five percent of EGS galaxies and fourteen percent of high-z DEEP2 galaxies are assigned to galaxy groups. The groups were detected using the Voronoi-Delaunay method (VDM) after it hasmore » been optimized on mock DEEP2 catalogs following similar methods to those employed in Gerke et al. In the optimization effort, we have taken particular care to ensure that the mock catalogs resemble the data as closely as possible, and we have fine-tuned our methods separately on mocks constructed for the EGS and the rest of DEEP2. We have also probed the effect of the assumed cosmology on our inferred group-finding efficiency by performing our optimization on three different mock catalogs with different background cosmologies, finding large differences in the group-finding success we can achieve for these different mocks. Using the mock catalog whose background cosmology is most consistent with current data, we estimate that the DEEP2 group catalog is 72% complete and 61% pure (74% and 67% for the EGS) and that the group finder correctly classifies 70% of galaxies that truly belong to groups, with an additional 46% of interloper galaxies contaminating the catalog (66% and 43% for the EGS). We also confirm that the VDM catalog reconstructs the abundance of galaxy groups with velocity dispersions above {approx}300 km s{sup -1} to an accuracy better than the sample variance, and this successful reconstruction is not strongly dependent on cosmology. This makes the DEEP2 group catalog a promising probe of the growth of cosmic structure that can potentially be used for cosmological tests.« less
Selection and Cataloging of Adult Pornography Web Sites for Academic Libraries
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Dilevko, Juris; Gottlieb, Lisa
2004-01-01
Pornography has become part of mainstream culture. As such, it has become a subject of academic research, and this, in turn, has implications for university libraries. Focusing on adult Internet pornography, this study suggests that academic libraries should provide access to adult pornographic Web sites by including them in their online catalogs.
Combined Film Catalog, 1972, United States Atomic Energy Commission.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Atomic Energy Commission, Washington, DC.
A comprehensive listing of all current United States Atomic Energy Commission (USAEC) films, this catalog describes 232 films in two major film collections. Part One: Education-Information contains 17 subject categories and two series and describes 134 films with indicated understanding levels on each film for use by schools. The categories…
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Assef, R. J.; Stern, D.; Noirot, G.; Jun, H. D.; Cutri, R. M.; Eisenhardt, P. R. M.
2018-02-01
We present two large catalogs of active galactic nucleus (AGN) candidates identified across 30,093 deg2 of extragalactic sky from the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer’s AllWISE Data Release. Both catalogs are selected purely using the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) W1 and W2 bands. The R90 catalog consists of 4,543,530 AGN candidates with 90% reliability, while the C75 catalog consists of 20,907,127 AGN candidates with 75% completeness. These reliability and completeness figures were determined from a detailed analysis of UV- to near-IR spectral energy distributions of ∼ {10}5 sources in the 9 deg2 Boötes field. The AGN selection criteria are based on those of Assef et al. (2013) recalibrated to the AllWISE data release. We provide a detailed discussion of potential artifacts and excise portions of the sky close to the Galactic Center, Galactic Plane, nearby galaxies, and other expected contaminating sources. These catalogs are expected to enable a broad range of science, and we present a few illustrative cases. From the R90 sample, we identify 45 highly variable AGNs lacking radio counterparts in the FIRST survey. One of these sources, WISEA J142846.71+172353.1, is a changing-look quasar at z = 0.104, which has changed from having broad Hα to being a narrow-lined AGN. We characterize our catalogs by comparing them to large, wide-area AGN catalogs in the literature. We identify four ROSAT X-ray sources that are each matched to three WISE-selected AGNs in the R90 sample within 30″. Spectroscopy reveals that one of these systems, 2RXS J150158.6+691029, consists of a triplet of quasars at z = 1.133 ± 0.004, suggestive of a rich group or forming galaxy cluster.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: DIA OGLE2 candidate variable stars catalog (Wozniak+, 2002)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wozniak, P. R.; Udalski, A.; Szymanski, M.; Kubiak, M.; Pietrzynski, G.; Soszinski, I.; Zebrun, K.
2005-07-01
We present the first edition of a catalog of variable stars from OGLE-II Galactic bulge data covering 3 years: 1997-1999. Typically 200-300 I band data points are available in 49 fields between -11 and +11 degrees in galactic longitude, totaling roughly 11 square degrees in sky coverage. Photometry was obtained using the Difference Image Analysis (DIA) software and tied to the OGLE data base with the DoPhot package. The present version of the catalog comprises 221801 light curves. In this preliminary work the level of contamination by spurious detections is still about 10%. Parts of the catalog have only crude calibration, insufficient for distance determinations. The next, fully calibrated, edition will include the data collected in year 2000. The data is accessible via ftp, at ftp://bulge.princeton.edu/ogle/ogle2/bulgediavariables (1 data file).
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Photometric observations of PMS objects (Fernandez, 1995)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Fernandez, M.
1995-05-01
We present the observational data of a photometric monitoring of 24 pre-main sequence objects: T Tauri stars, Ae/Be Herbig stars and some unclassified objects. Observations were carried out from July 1988 to August 1992, using the UBV(RI)_c system. Variability with time scales from days to years and amplitudes in the V band larger than 0.1 mag is found for a part of this sample. The analysis of the possible causes of this variability are discussed in separate papers (Fernandez & Eiroa 1995a,b). (24 data files).
In Search of the Largest Possible Tsunami: An Example Following the 2011 Japan Tsunami
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Geist, E. L.; Parsons, T.
2012-12-01
Many tsunami hazard assessments focus on estimating the largest possible tsunami: i.e., the worst-case scenario. This is typically performed by examining historic and prehistoric tsunami data or by estimating the largest source that can produce a tsunami. We demonstrate that worst-case assessments derived from tsunami and tsunami-source catalogs are greatly affected by sampling bias. Both tsunami and tsunami sources are well represented by a Pareto distribution. It is intuitive to assume that there is some limiting size (i.e., runup or seismic moment) for which a Pareto distribution is truncated or tapered. Likelihood methods are used to determine whether a limiting size can be determined from existing catalogs. Results from synthetic catalogs indicate that several observations near the limiting size are needed for accurate parameter estimation. Accordingly, the catalog length needed to empirically determine the limiting size is dependent on the difference between the limiting size and the observation threshold, with larger catalog lengths needed for larger limiting-threshold size differences. Most, if not all, tsunami catalogs and regional tsunami source catalogs are of insufficient length to determine the upper bound on tsunami runup. As an example, estimates of the empirical tsunami runup distribution are obtained from the Miyako tide gauge station in Japan, which recorded the 2011 Tohoku-oki tsunami as the largest tsunami among 51 other events. Parameter estimation using a tapered Pareto distribution is made both with and without the Tohoku-oki event. The catalog without the 2011 event appears to have a low limiting tsunami runup. However, this is an artifact of undersampling. Including the 2011 event, the catalog conforms more to a pure Pareto distribution with no confidence in estimating a limiting runup. Estimating the size distribution of regional tsunami sources is subject to the same sampling bias. Physical attenuation mechanisms such as wave breaking likely limit the maximum tsunami runup at a particular site. However, historic and prehistoric data alone cannot determine the upper bound on tsunami runup. Because of problems endemic to sampling Pareto distributions of tsunamis and their sources, we recommend that tsunami hazard assessment be based on a specific design probability of exceedance following a pure Pareto distribution, rather than attempting to determine the worst-case scenario.
AUTOCLASSIFICATION OF THE VARIABLE 3XMM SOURCES USING THE RANDOM FOREST MACHINE LEARNING ALGORITHM
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Farrell, Sean A.; Murphy, Tara; Lo, Kitty K., E-mail: s.farrell@physics.usyd.edu.au
In the current era of large surveys and massive data sets, autoclassification of astrophysical sources using intelligent algorithms is becoming increasingly important. In this paper we present the catalog of variable sources in the Third XMM-Newton Serendipitous Source catalog (3XMM) autoclassified using the Random Forest machine learning algorithm. We used a sample of manually classified variable sources from the second data release of the XMM-Newton catalogs (2XMMi-DR2) to train the classifier, obtaining an accuracy of ∼92%. We also evaluated the effectiveness of identifying spurious detections using a sample of spurious sources, achieving an accuracy of ∼95%. Manual investigation of amore » random sample of classified sources confirmed these accuracy levels and showed that the Random Forest machine learning algorithm is highly effective at automatically classifying 3XMM sources. Here we present the catalog of classified 3XMM variable sources. We also present three previously unidentified unusual sources that were flagged as outlier sources by the algorithm: a new candidate supergiant fast X-ray transient, a 400 s X-ray pulsar, and an eclipsing 5 hr binary system coincident with a known Cepheid.« less
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Sample of Fermi Blazars (Chen+, 2016)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Chen, Y.-Y.; Zhang, X.; Xiong, D.-R.; Wang, S.-J.; Yu, X.-L.
2016-04-01
We tried to select a large number of blazars with reliable redshift, radio core and extended radio luminosity at 1.4GHz. Firstly, we considered the following samples of blazars to get the radio core luminosity and extended luminosity at 1.4GHz: Kharb et al. (2010, J/ApJ/710/764), Antonucci & Ulvestad (1985ApJ...294..158A), Cassaro et al. (1999A&AS..139..601C), Murphy et al. (1993MNRAS.264..298M), Landt & Bignall (2008MNRAS.391..967L), Caccianiga & Marcha (2004, Cat. J/MNRAS/348/973), Giroletti et al. (2004). We cross-correlated these samples with the Fermi LAT Third Source Catalog (3FGL), and we acquired the 3FGL spectral index and energy flux at 0.1-100GeV from clean sources in 3FGL (Fermi-LAT Collaboration 2015, J/ApJS/218/23) Using these catalogs, we compiled 201 Fermi blazars. (1 data file).
Catalog of Selected Federal Publications on Illegal Drug and Alcohol Abuse.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
National Clearinghouse for Alcohol and Drug Information (DHHS), Rockville, MD.
A concise collection of federal publications in the area of illegal drug and alcohol abuse, this catalog begins with a listing of seven federal clearinghouse, with information on services, user audience, and a contact provided for each. The main part of the document provides briefly annotated information on federal publications organized into the…
Prototyping a Microcomputer-Based Online Library Catalog. Occasional Papers Number 177.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Lazinger, Susan S.; Shoval, Peretz
This report examines and evaluates the application of prototyping methodology in the design of a microcomputer-based online library catalog. The methodology for carrying out the research involves a five-part examination of the problem on both the theoretical and applied levels, each of which is discussed in a separate section as follows: (1) a…
14 CFR Appendix B to Part 420 - Method for Defining a Flight Corridor
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-01-01
... with sources where data acceptable to the FAA may be obtained. (i) An applicant must select..., Aeronautical Charts and Publications Catalog. The catalog and maps may be ordered through the U.S. Dept. of...) Wind direction as a function of altitude; and (2) Wind magnitude as a function of altitude. (I...
14 CFR Appendix B to Part 420 - Method for Defining a Flight Corridor
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-01-01
... with sources where data acceptable to the FAA may be obtained. (i) An applicant must select..., Aeronautical Charts and Publications Catalog. The catalog and maps may be ordered through the U.S. Dept. of...) Wind direction as a function of altitude; and (2) Wind magnitude as a function of altitude. (I...
14 CFR Appendix B to Part 420 - Method for Defining a Flight Corridor
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-01-01
... with sources where data acceptable to the FAA may be obtained. (i) An applicant must select..., Aeronautical Charts and Publications Catalog. The catalog and maps may be ordered through the U.S. Dept. of...) Wind direction as a function of altitude; and (2) Wind magnitude as a function of altitude. (I...
14 CFR Appendix B to Part 420 - Method for Defining a Flight Corridor
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-01-01
... with sources where data acceptable to the FAA may be obtained. (i) An applicant must select..., Aeronautical Charts and Publications Catalog. The catalog and maps may be ordered through the U.S. Dept. of...) Wind direction as a function of altitude; and (2) Wind magnitude as a function of altitude. (I...
VizieR Online Data Catalog: QSOs selection from SDSS and WISE (Richards+, 2015)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Richards, G. T.; Myers, A. D.; Peters, C. M.; Krawczyk, C. M.; Chase, G.; Ross, N. P.; Fan, X.; Jiang, L.; Lacy, M.; McGreer, I. D.; Trump, J. R.; Riegel, R. N.
2015-10-01
We construct the master quasar catalog by gathering samples of spectroscopically confirmed quasars within the SDSS-I/II/III (York et al. 2000AJ....120.1579Y; Eisenstein et al. 2011AJ....142...72E) footprint. (2 data files).
The Apollo 15 coarse fines (4-10 mm)
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Ryder, Graham; Sherman, Sarah Bean
1989-01-01
A new catalog of the Apollo 15 coarse fines particles is presented. Powell's macroscopic descriptions, resulting from his 1972 particle by particle binocular examination of all of the Apollo 15 4 to 10 mm fines samples, are retained. His groupings are also retained, but petrographic, chemical, and other data from later analyses are incorporated into this catalog to better characterize individual particles and describe the groups. A large number of particles have no characterization beyond that done by Powell. Complete descriptions of the particles and all known references are provided. The catalog is intended for anyone interested in the rock types collected by Dave Scott and Jim Irwin in the Hadley-Appenine region, and particularly for researchers requiring sample allocations.
2008-01-01
Distributed Drug Discovery (D3) proposes solving large drug discovery problems by breaking them into smaller units for processing at multiple sites. A key component of the synthetic and computational stages of D3 is the global rehearsal of prospective reagents and their subsequent use in the creation of virtual catalogs of molecules accessible by simple, inexpensive combinatorial chemistry. The first section of this article documents the feasibility of the synthetic component of Distributed Drug Discovery. Twenty-four alkylating agents were rehearsed in the United States, Poland, Russia, and Spain, for their utility in the synthesis of resin-bound unnatural amino acids 1, key intermediates in many combinatorial chemistry procedures. This global reagent rehearsal, coupled to virtual library generation, increases the likelihood that any member of that virtual library can be made. It facilitates the realistic integration of worldwide virtual D3 catalog computational analysis with synthesis. The second part of this article describes the creation of the first virtual D3 catalog. It reports the enumeration of 24 416 acylated unnatural amino acids 5, assembled from lists of either rehearsed or well-precedented alkylating and acylating reagents, and describes how the resulting catalog can be freely accessed, searched, and downloaded by the scientific community. PMID:19105725
A catalog of galaxy morphology and photometric redshift
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Paul, Nicholas; Shamir, Lior
2018-01-01
Morphology carries important information about the physical characteristics of a galaxy. Here we used machine learning to produce a catalog of ~3,000,000 SDSS galaxies classified by their broad morphology into spiral and elliptical galaxies. Comparison of the catalog to Galaxy Zooshows that the catalog contains a subset of 1.7*10^6 galaxies classified with the same level of consistency as the debiased “superclean” sub-sample. In addition to the morphology, we also computed the photometric redshifts of the galaxies. Several pattern recognition algorithms and variable selection strategies were tested, and the best accuracy of mean absolute error of ~0.0062 was achieved by using random forest with a combination of manually and automatically selected variables. The catalog shows that for redshift lower than 0.085 galaxies that visually look spiral become more prevalent as the redshift gets higher. For redshift greater than 0.085 galaxies thatvisually look elliptical become more prevalent. The catalog as well as the source code used to produce it is publicly available athttps://figshare.com/articles/Morphology_and_photometric_redshift_catalog/4833593 .
VizieR Online Data Catalog: HCG and RSCG compact group galaxies with WISE (Zucker+, 2016)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Zucker, C.; Walker, L. M.; Johnson, K.; Gallagher, S.; Alatalo, K.; Tzanavaris, P.
2016-07-01
For this study, we draw our sample from groups in the HCG catalog (Hickson 1982, VII/213) and the Redshift Survey Compact Group catalog (RSCG; Barton et al. 1996AJ....112..871B). We utilize new ALLWISE coadds from Lang (unWISE; 2014AJ....147..108L), which preserve the native resolution of the raw frames (~6.1", 6.4", 6.5" and 12.0" for bands W1, W2, W3, and W4). (1 data file).
Kepler’s DR25 Most Earth-like Planet Candidates: What To Know Before You Go
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Thompson, Susan E.; Kepler Team
2018-01-01
The Kepler mission’s latest catalog of planet candidates (data release 25 KOI catalog at the NASA exoplanet archive) was released in June of 2017. The catalog contains 4034 candidates including a significant population of terrestrial-size planets in the habitable zone of FGK dwarf stars. I will highlight what we know about these planet candidates in the DR25 catalog and discuss some of the caveats when working with these detections. Specifically, I will discuss how the noise in the Kepler light curves (from both the instrument and the stars) is known to occasionally produce weak, transit-like signals. We use simulations of this noise to measure how often these signals sneak into the catalog. I will also demonstrate ways to select a high-reliability sample using information available in the catalog. Such considerations may prove useful for anyone planning to use these planet candidates for occurrence rate calculations, choosing targets for follow-up, or deciding which planet to visit on his/her next holiday.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Low-mass stars in 25 Ori group and Orion OB1a (Suarez+, 2017)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Suarez, G.; Downes, J. J.; Roman-Zuniga, C.; Covey, K. R.; Tapia, M.; Hernandez, J.; Petr-Gotzens, M. G.; Stassun, K. G.; Briceno, C.
2017-09-01
The V, R, and I photometry used in this work was obtained from the Centro de Investigaciones de Astronomia (CIDA) Deep Survey of Orion (CDSO) catalog (Downes et al. 2014, Cat. J/MNRAS/444/1793), which was constructed by coadding the multi-epoch optical observations from the CIDA Variability Survey of Orion (CVSO; Briceno et al. 2005, Cat. J/AJ/129/907). The sensitivity limits of the CDSO covers the Low-Mass Star (LMS) and Brown Dwarf (BD) population of 25 Ori and its surroundings within the region 79.7°<~α<~82.7° and 0.35°<~δ<~3.35°. The limiting magnitude of the CDSO photometry in this region is Ilim=22 and the completeness magnitude is Icom=19.6 (Downes et al. 2014, Cat. J/MNRAS/444/1793), enough to ensure an I-band detection even for the faintest targets of our spectroscopic sample (I{approx}17.0). Additionally, we used the u, g, r, i, and z photometry from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) catalog (Finkbeiner et al. 2004AJ....128.2577F; Ahn et al. 2012, Cat. V/139). These values are listed in Table1. The Z, Y, J, H, and Ks near-infrared photometry used in this study was carried out by Petr-Gotzens et al. (2011Msngr.145...29P) as part of the Visible and Infrared Survey Telescope for Astronomy (VISTA) science verification surveys (Arnaboldi et al. 2010Msngr.139....6A). The 5σ limiting magnitudes of the VISTA survey of the Orion star-forming region are Z=22.5, Y=21.2, J=20.4, H=19.4, and Ks=18.6, which are enough to have VISTA photometry even for the faintest objects in our spectroscopic sample (J{approx}15.0). Additionally, we used near-infrared photometry from the 2MASS catalog (Cutri et al. 2003, Cat. II/246) and mid-infrared photometry from IRAC-Spitzer (Hernandez et al. 2007, Cat. J/ApJ/671/1784) and the AllWISE catalog (Cutri et al. 2013, Cat. II/328). This infrared photometry is listed in Table1. The spectra used in this paper were obtained as part of the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS; Dawson et al. 2013AJ....145...10D), which is one of the four main surveys of SDSS (York et al. 2000AJ....120.1579Y) in its third phase (SDSS-III; Eisenstein et al. 2011AJ....142...72E). The BOSS spectrograph has plates with 1000 fibers of 2'' diameter spanning a field of view of 3.0° in diameter and covering a wavelength range from 3560Å to 10400Å with a resolution of R=1560 at 3700Å and R=2650 at 9000Å (Gunn et al. 2006AJ....131.2332G; Smee et al. 2013AJ....146...32S). (4 data files).
Fire in Your Life: A Catalog of Flammable Products & Ignition Sources.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Consumer Product Safety Commission, Washington, DC.
To reduce the number of deaths and injuries caused by fires, this catalog (which is part of the Hap and Hazard Series) gives information about typical accident patterns and about the safest way to purchase, use, store, maintain, and dispose of flammable products. As a reference source, it is intended for use in formal teaching situations as well…
CPM Pairs from LSPM so Far Not WDS Listed – Part IV
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Knapp, Wilfried; Nanson, John
2018-04-01
The LSPM catalog (Lepine and Shara 2005) is a rich source for CPM pairs we thought already exhausted – but as we found during research for our report "A New Concept for Counter-Checking of Assumed CPM Pairs" (Knapp and Nanson 2017), there are still many potential CPM pairs indicated in LSPM not listed in the WDS catalog. After our first three reports on about 100 such objects (Knapp and Nanson 2017 - CPM pairs from LSPM so far not WDS listed – Part I/II/III), this report with 30 additional potential common proper motion pairs is presented here.
The National Geological and Geophysical Data Preservation Program
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Dickinson, T. L.; Steinmetz, J. C.; Gundersen, L. C.; Pierce, B. S.
2006-12-01
The ability to preserve and maintain geoscience data and collections has not kept pace with the growing need for accessible digital information and the technology to make it so. The Nation has lost valuable and unique geologic records and is in danger of losing much more. Many federal and state geological repositories are currently at their capacity for maintaining and storing data or samples. Some repositories are gaining additional, but temporary and substandard space, using transport containers or offsite warehouses where access is limited and storage conditions are poor. Over the past several years, there has been an increasing focus on the state of scientific collections in the United States. For example, the National Geological and Geophysical Data Preservation Program (NGGDPP) Act was passed as part of the Energy Policy Act of 2005, authorizing $30 million in funding for each of five years. The Act directs the U.S. Geological Survey to administer this program that includes a National Digital Catalog and Federal assistance to support our nation's repositories. Implementation of the Program awaits federal appropriations. The NGGDPP is envisioned as a national network of cooperating geoscience materials and data repositories that are operated independently yet guided by unified standards, procedures, and protocols for metadata. The holdings will be widely accessible through a common and mirrored Internet-based catalog (National Digital Catalog). The National Digital Catalog will tie the observations and analyses to the physical materials they come from. Our Nation's geological and geophysical data are invaluable and in some instances irreplaceable due to the destruction of outcrops, urbanization and restricted access. These data will enable the next generation of scientific research and education, enable more effective and efficient research, and may have future economic benefits through the discovery of new oil and gas accumulations, and mineral deposits.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: OGLE II SMC eclipsing binaries (Wyrzykowski+, 2004)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wyrzykowski, L.; Udalski, A.; Kubiak, M.; Szymanski, M. K.; Zebrun, K.; Soszinski, I.; Wozniak, P. R.; Pietrzynski, G.; Szewczyk, O.
2009-03-01
We present new version of the OGLE-II catalog of eclipsing binary stars detected in the Small Magellanic Cloud, based on Difference Image Analysis catalog of variable stars in the Magellanic Clouds containing data collected from 1997 to 2000. We found 1351 eclipsing binary stars in the central 2.4 square degree area of the SMC. 455 stars are newly discovered objects, not found in the previous release of the catalog. The eclipsing objects were selected with the automatic search algorithm based on the artificial neural network. The full catalog with individual photometry is accessible from the OGLE INTERNET archive, at ftp://sirius.astrouw.edu.pl/ogle/ogle2/var_stars/smc/ecl . Regular observations of the SMC fields started on June 26, 1997 and covered about 2.4 square degrees of central parts of the SMC. Reductions of the photometric data collected up to the end of May 2000 were performed with the Difference Image Analysis (DIA) package. (1 data file).
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Gwyn, Stephen D. J., E-mail: Stephen.Gwyn@nrc-cnrc.gc.ca
This paper describes the image stacks and catalogs of the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope Legacy Survey produced using the MegaPipe data pipeline at the Canadian Astronomy Data Centre. The Legacy Survey is divided into two parts. The Deep Survey consists of four fields each of 1 deg{sup 2}, with magnitude limits (50% completeness for point sources) of u = 27.5, g = 27.9, r = 27.7, i = 27.4, and z = 26.2. It contains 1.6 Multiplication-Sign 10{sup 6} sources. The Wide Survey consists of 150 deg{sup 2} split over four fields, with magnitude limits of u = 26.0, g = 26.5,more » r = 25.9, i = 25.7, and z = 24.6. It contains 3 Multiplication-Sign 10{sup 7} sources. This paper describes the calibration, image stacking, and catalog generation process. The images and catalogs are available on the web through several interfaces: normal image and text file catalog downloads, a 'Google Sky' interface, an image cutout service, and a catalog database query service.« less
A Photometric redshift galaxy catalog from the Red-Sequence Cluster Survey
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Hsieh, Bau-Ching; /Taiwan, Natl. Central U. /Taipei, Inst. Astron. Astrophys.; Yee, H.K.C.
2005-02-01
The Red-Sequence Cluster Survey (RCS) provides a large and deep photometric catalog of galaxies in the z' and R{sub c} bands for 90 square degrees of sky, and supplemental V and B data have been obtained for 33.6 deg{sup 2}. They compile a photometric redshift catalog from these 4-band data by utilizing the empirical quadratic polynomial photometric redshift fitting technique in combination with CNOC2 and GOODS/HDF-N redshift data. The training set includes 4924 spectral redshifts. The resulting catalog contains more than one million galaxies with photometric redshifts < 1.5 and R{sub c} < 24, giving an rms scatter {delta}({Delta}z)
Correcting LASCO CME Catalogs to Study the Change in CME Rate from Solar Cycle 23 to 24
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hess, P.; Colaninno, R. C.
2017-12-01
While most measures of solar activity declined from SC 23 to SC 24, many CME catalogs that span the entire LASCO mission did not show a similar drop in CME count. The raw CME totals from many catalogs show steady levels between the two cycles . However, these totals are complicated by a doubling of the LASCO image cadence in 2010. We show, using a consistent cadence on the automated Solar Eruption Event Detection System (SEEDS) that the CME count seems to follow the SSN throughout the entire catalog. Because SEEDS is a C2 catalog, the question has been raised if this effect is limited only to small transients that can be eliminated using larger width thresholds or other catalogs that also include C3, to support that this enhanced CME rate relative to the SSN is a real effect. We will also present data from CACTus, CORIMP and CDAW that suggests this is a false assumption, and that all catalogs have their own issues in dealing with the increased LASCO cadence. This evidence points to there being no appreciable difference in the ratio between CME rate and SSN between SC 23 and SC 24. We provide some examples of why these catalogs may be susceptible to a change in data rate, and use this as part of a wider discussion of the nature of automated catalogs and how to properly consider the outputs of these algorithms. While the automated catalogs are an extremely valuable tool for getting a consistent measure of coronal activity, the significant false detection rate of an automated catalog must always be considered. Because of this, the temporal trends of the catalog results relative to one another is a far more valuable diagnostic than a raw total at any one time.
The First APOKASC Catalog of Kepler Dwarf and Subgiant Stars
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Serenelli, Aldo; Johnson, Jennifer; Huber, Daniel; Pinsonneault, Marc; Ball, Warrick H.; Tayar, Jamie; Silva Aguirre, Victor; Basu, Sarbani; Troup, Nicholas; Hekker, Saskia; Kallinger, Thomas; Stello, Dennis; Davies, Guy R.; Lund, Mikkel N.; Mathur, Savita; Mosser, Benoit; Stassun, Keivan G.; Chaplin, William J.; Elsworth, Yvonne; García, Rafael A.; Handberg, Rasmus; Holtzman, Jon; Hearty, Fred; García-Hernández, D. A.; Gaulme, Patrick; Zamora, Olga
2017-12-01
We present the first APOKASC catalog of spectroscopic and asteroseismic data for dwarfs and subgiants. Asteroseismic data for our sample of 415 objects have been obtained by the Kepler mission in short (58.5 s) cadence, and light curves span from 30 up to more than 1000 days. The spectroscopic parameters are based on spectra taken as part of the Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment and correspond to Data Release 13 of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. We analyze our data using two independent {T}{eff} scales, the spectroscopic values from DR13 and those derived from SDSS griz photometry. We use the differences in our results arising from these choices as a test of systematic temperature uncertainties and find that they can lead to significant differences in the derived stellar properties. Determinations of surface gravity ({log}g), mean density (< ρ > ), radius (R), mass (M), and age (τ) for the whole sample have been carried out by means of (stellar) grid-based modeling. We have thoroughly assessed random and systematic error sources in the spectroscopic and asteroseismic data, as well as in the grid-based modeling determination of the stellar quantities provided in the catalog. We provide stellar properties determined for each of the two {T}{eff} scales. The median combined (random and systematic) uncertainties are 2% (0.01 dex; {log}g), 3.4% (< ρ > ), 2.6% (R), 5.1% (M), and 19% (τ) for the photometric {T}{eff} scale and 2% ({log}g), 3.5% (< ρ > ), 2.7% (R), 6.3% (M), and 23% (τ) for the spectroscopic scale. We present comparisons with stellar quantities in the asteroseismic catalog by Chaplin et al. that highlight the importance of having metallicity measurements for determining stellar parameters accurately. Finally, we compare our results with those coming from a variety of sources, including stellar radii determined from TGAS parallaxes and asteroseismic analyses based on individual frequencies. We find a very good agreement for all inferred quantities. The latter comparison, in particular, gives strong support to the determination of stellar quantities based on global seismology, a relevant result for future missions such as TESS and PLATO.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Pleiades members stellar properties (Somers+, 2017)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Somers, G.; Stassun, K. G.
2018-04-01
We began with the newly assembled catalog of literature lithium measurements reported by Barrado et al. (2016, J/A+A/596/A113), who accepted only stars with membership probability >0.75. A small number of Pleiads lie behind an HI cloud, and are thus far more extincted than the rest (e.g., Gordon & Arny 1984AJ.....89..672G); for simplicity, we discard these members. We then cross-correlated this sample with the famous UBV photometric catalog of Johnson & Mitchell (1958ApJ...128...31J), who produced homogeneous photometry for a large sample of Pleiades members. We further selected stars with measured rotation rates, either from the HATNet collaboration (Hartman et al. 2010, J/MNRAS/408/475), or the recent analysis of K2 data (Rebull et al. 2016, J/AJ/152/113, J/AJ/152/114; Stauffer et al. 2016, J/AJ/152/115), preferring the latter for joint detections. Finally, we queried VizieR (http://vizier.u-strasbg.fr/) to obtain KS-band magnitudes from the Two-Micron All-Sky Survey (2MASS) catalog (Skrutskie et al. 2006, Cat. VII/233), which detected every star in our reduced sample. These criteria produced a total of 83 high-probability cluster members, stretching from early-F to late-K type. (3 data files).
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Pichara, Karim; Protopapas, Pavlos
We present an automatic classification method for astronomical catalogs with missing data. We use Bayesian networks and a probabilistic graphical model that allows us to perform inference to predict missing values given observed data and dependency relationships between variables. To learn a Bayesian network from incomplete data, we use an iterative algorithm that utilizes sampling methods and expectation maximization to estimate the distributions and probabilistic dependencies of variables from data with missing values. To test our model, we use three catalogs with missing data (SAGE, Two Micron All Sky Survey, and UBVI) and one complete catalog (MACHO). We examine howmore » classification accuracy changes when information from missing data catalogs is included, how our method compares to traditional missing data approaches, and at what computational cost. Integrating these catalogs with missing data, we find that classification of variable objects improves by a few percent and by 15% for quasar detection while keeping the computational cost the same.« less
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Morphologies of z<0.01 SDSS-DR7 galaxies (Ann+, 2015)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ann, H. B.; Seo, M.; Ha, D. K.
2015-05-01
This paper presents a catalog of the morphological types of galaxies whose redshifts are less than z=0.01. The morphological types are determined by a visual inspection of the color images provided by SDSS DR7 (II/294). The majority of galaxies in the present sample come from the KIAS-VAGC (Choi et al. 2010JKAS...43..191C) which is based on the spectroscopic target galaxies of the SDSS DR7 complemented by the bright galaxies with known redshifts from various catalogs. (1 data file).
STT Doubles with Large Delta M - Part VII: Andromeda, Pisces, Auriga
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Knapp, Wilfried; Nanson, John
2017-01-01
The results of visual double star observing sessions suggested a pattern for STT doubles with large DM of being harder to resolve than would be expected based on the WDS catalog data. It was felt this might be a problem with expectations on one hand, and on the other might be an indication of a need for new precise measurements, so we decided to take a closer look at a selected sample of STT doubles and do some research. Similar to the other objects covered so far several of the components show parameters quite different from the current WDS data.
Southern Salish Sea Habitat Map Series data catalog
Cochrane, Guy R.
2015-01-01
This data catalog contains much of the data used to prepare the SIMs in the Southern Salish Sea Habitat Map Series. Other data that were used to prepare the maps were compiled from previously published sources (for example, sediment samples and seismic reflection profiles) and are not included in this data series.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Watkins, Betty; And Others
This catalog was designed to provide performance objectives and performance guides associated with current occupational information relating to the job of homemaker. The performance objectives and guides were developed following a literature review and a survey of random samples of homemakers in the five participating states (Alabama, Florida,…
A gene catalogue of the Sprague-Dawley rat gut metagenome.
Pan, Hudan; Guo, Ruijin; Zhu, Jie; Wang, Qi; Ju, Yanmei; Xie, Ying; Zheng, Yanfang; Wang, Zhifeng; Li, Ting; Liu, Zhongqiu; Lu, Linlin; Li, Fei; Tong, Bin; Xiao, Liang; Xu, Xun; Li, Runze; Yuan, Zhongwen; Yang, Huanming; Wang, Jian; Kristiansen, Karsten; Jia, Huijue; Liu, Liang
2018-05-01
Laboratory rats such as the Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats are an important model for biomedical studies in relation to human physiological or pathogenic processes. Here we report the first catalog of microbial genes in fecal samples from Sprague-Dawley rats. The catalog was established using 98 fecal samples from 49 SD rats, divided in 7 experimental groups, and collected at different time points 30 days apart. The established gene catalog comprises 5,130,167 non-redundant genes with an average length of 750 bp, among which 64.6% and 26.7% were annotated to phylum and genus levels, respectively. Functionally, 53.1%, 21.8%,and 31% of the genes could be annotated to KEGG orthologous groups, modules, and pathways, respectively. A comparison of rat gut metagenome catalogue with human or mouse revealed a higher pairwise overlap between rats and humans (2.47%) than between mice and humans (1.19%) at the gene level. Ninety-seven percent of the functional pathways in the human catalog were present in the rat catalogue, underscoring the potential use of rats for biomedical research.
Photometric Redshifts for the Large-Area Stripe 82X Multiwavelength Survey
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Tasnim Ananna, Tonima; Salvato, Mara; Urry, C. Megan; LaMassa, Stephanie M.; STRIPE 82X
2016-06-01
The Stripe 82X survey currently includes 6000 X-ray sources in 31.3 square degrees of XMM-Newton and Chandra X-ray coverage, most of which are AGN. Using a maximum-likelihood approach, we identified optical and infrared counterparts in the SDSS, VHS K-band and WISE W1-band catalogs. 1200 objects which had different best associations in different catalogs were checked by eye. Our most recent paper provided the multiwavelength catalogs for this sample. More than 1000 counterparts have spectroscopic redshifts, either from SDSS spectroscopy or our own follow-up program. Using the extensive multiwavelength data in this field, we provide photometric redshift estimates for most of the remaining sources, which are 80-90% accurate according to the training set. Our sample has a large number of candidates that are very faint in optical and bright in IR. We expect a large fraction of these objects to be the obscured AGN sample we need to complete the census on black hole growth at a range of redshifts.
Time-dependent clustering analysis of the second BATSE gamma-ray burst catalog
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Brainerd, J. J.; Meegan, C. A.; Briggs, Michael S.; Pendleton, G. N.; Brock, M. N.
1995-01-01
A time-dependent two-point correlation-function analysis of the Burst and Transient Source Experiment (BATSE) 2B catalog finds no evidence of burst repetition. As part of this analysis, we discuss the effects of sky exposure on the observability of burst repetition and present the equation describing the signature of burst repetition in the data. For a model of all burst repetition from a source occurring in less than five days we derive upper limits on the number of bursts in the catalog from repeaters and model-dependent upper limits on the fraction of burst sources that produce multiple outbursts.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: OGLE eclipsing binaries in LMC (Wyrzykowski+, 2003)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wyrzykowski, L.; Udalski, A.; Kubiak, M.; Szymanski, M.; Zebrun, K.; Soszynski, I.; Wozniak, P. R.; Pietrzynski, G.; Szewczyk, O.
2003-09-01
We present the catalog of 2580 eclipsing binary stars detected in 4.6 square degree area of the central parts of the Large Magellanic Cloud. The photometric data were collected during the second phase of the OGLE microlensing search from 1997 to 2000. The eclipsing objects were selected with the automatic search algorithm based on an artificial neural network. Basic statistics of eclipsing stars are presented. Also, the list of 36 candidates of detached eclipsing binaries for spectroscopic study and for precise LMC distance determination is provided. The full catalog is accessible from the OGLE Internet archive. (2 data files).
A New Sample of Cool Subdwarfs from SDSS: Properties and Kinematics
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Savcheva, Antonia; West, Andrew A.; Bochanski, John J.
2014-06-01
We present a new sample of M subdwarfs compiled from the 7th data re- lease of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. With 3517 new subdwarfs, this new sample significantly increases the number the existing sample of low-mass subdwarfs. This catalog includes unprecedentedly large numbers of extreme and ultra sudwarfs. Here, we present the catalog and the statistical analysis we perform. Subdwarf template spectra are derived. We show color-color and reduced proper motion diagrams of the three metallicity classes, which are shown to separate from the disk dwarf population. The extreme and ultra subdwarfs are seen at larger values of reduced proper motion as expected for more dynamically heated populations. We determine 3D kinematics for all of the stars with proper motions. The color-magnitude diagrams show a clear separation of the three metallicity classes with the ultra and extreme subdwarfs being significantly closer to the main sequence than the ordinary subdwarfs. All subdwarfs lie below and to the blue of the main sequence. Based on the average (U, V, W ) velocities and their dispersions, the extreme and ultra subdwarfs likely belong to the Galactic halo, while the ordinary subdwarfs are likely part of the old Galactic (or thick) disk. An extensive activity analy- sis of subdwarfs is performed using chromospheric Hα emission and 208 active subdwarfs are found. We show that while the activity fraction of subdwarfs rises with spectral class and levels off at the latest spectral classes, consistent with the behavior of M dwarfs, the extreme and ultra subdwarfs are basically flat.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
NONE
1995-08-01
The Knowledge and Abilities Catalog for Nuclear Power Plant Operators: Boiling-Water Reactors (BWRs) (NUREG-1123, Revision 1) provides the basis for the development of content-valid licensing examinations for reactor operators (ROs) and senior reactor operators (SROs). The examinations developed using the BWR Catalog along with the Operator Licensing Examiner Standards (NUREG-1021) and the Examiner`s Handbook for Developing Operator Licensing Written Examinations (NUREG/BR-0122), will cover the topics listed under Title 10, Code of Federal Regulations, Part 55 (10 CFR 55). The BWR Catalog contains approximately 7,000 knowledge and ability (K/A) statements for ROs and SROs at BWRs. The catalog is organized intomore » six major sections: Organization of the Catalog, Generic Knowledge and Ability Statements, Plant Systems grouped by Safety Functions, Emergency and Abnormal Plant Evolutions, Components, and Theory. Revision 1 to the BWR Catalog represents a modification in form and content of the original catalog. The K/As were linked to their applicable 10 CFR 55 item numbers. SRO level K/As were identified by 10 CFR 55.43 item numbers. The plant-wide generic and system generic K/As were combined in one section with approximately one hundred new K/As. Component Cooling Water and Instrument Air Systems were added to the Systems Section. Finally, High Containment Hydrogen Concentration and Plant Fire On Site evolutions added to the Emergency and Abnormal Plant Evolutions section.« less
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Fuqua, Lou; Fuqua, Debbie
Designed to address the skills that an auto parts specialist must master in order to be effective in the market place, this manual consists of 13 units of instruction. Covered in the units are orientation; human relations; communications; safety; parts and systems identification; stocking, shipping, and receiving; inventory control; cataloging and…
CPM Pairs from LSPM so far not WDS Listed â Part II
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Knapp, Wilfried; Nanson, John
2017-10-01
The LSPM catalog (Lepine and Shara 2005) is a rich source for CPM pairs we thought already exhausted â but as we found during research for our report âA new concept for counter-checking of assumed CPM pairsâ (Knapp and Nanson 2017) there are still many poten-tial CPM pairs indicated in LSPM which as of the end of 2016 are not listed in the WDS cata-log. After our first part on about 40 such objects (Knapp and Nanson 2017) the next report with about 30 additional common proper motion pairs is presented here.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-07-01
... Listed in the “Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance” 1. Assistance provided by the Office of Air, Noise... 66.001) 2. Assistance provided by the Office of Air, Noise and Radiation under the Clean Air Act of... 1977, section 205(g), as amended by Pub. L. 95-217 and the Federal Water Pollution Control Act, as...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-07-01
... Listed in the “Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance” 1. Assistance provided by the Office of Air, Noise... 66.001) 2. Assistance provided by the Office of Air, Noise and Radiation under the Clean Air Act of... 1977, section 205(g), as amended by Pub. L. 95-217 and the Federal Water Pollution Control Act, as...
Distributed Computerized Catalog System
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Borgen, Richard L.; Wagner, David A.
1995-01-01
DarkStar Distributed Catalog System describes arbitrary data objects in unified manner, providing end users with versatile, yet simple search mechanism for locating and identifying objects. Provides built-in generic and dynamic graphical user interfaces. Design of system avoids some of problems of standard DBMS, and system provides more flexibility than do conventional relational data bases, or object-oriented data bases. Data-collection lattice partly hierarchical representation of relationships among collections, subcollections, and data objects.
MC and A instrumentation catalog
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Neymotin, L.; Sviridova, V.
1998-06-01
In 1981 and 1985, two editions of a catalog of non-destructive nuclear measurement instrumentation, and material control and surveillance equipment, were published by Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL). The last edition of the catalog included one hundred and twenty-five entries covering a wide range of devices developed in the US and abroad. More than ten years have elapsed since the publication of the more recent Catalog. Devices described in it have undergone significant modifications, and new devices have been developed. Therefore, in order to assist specialists in the field of Material Control and Accounting (MC and A), a new catalog hasmore » been created. Work on this instrumentation catalog started in 1997 as a cooperative effort of Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL), operated by Brookhaven Science Associates under contract to the US Department of Energy, and the All-Russian Research Institute of Automatics (VNIIA), subordinate institute of the Atomic Energy Ministry of the Russian Federation, within the collaborative US-Russia Material Protection, Control, and Accounting (MPC and A) Program. Most of the equipment included in the Catalog are non-destructive assay (NDA) measurement devices employed for purposes of accounting, confirmation, and verification of nuclear materials. Other devices also included in the Catalog are employed in the detection and deterrence of unauthorized access to or removal of nuclear materials (material control: containment and surveillance). Equipment found in the Catalog comprises either: (1) complete devices or systems that can be used for MC and A applications; or (2) parts or components of complete systems, such as multi-channel analyzers, detectors, neutron generators, and software. All devices are categorized by their status of development--from prototype to serial production.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Baru, C.; Lin, K.
2009-04-01
The Geosciences Network project (www.geongrid.org) has been developing cyberinfrastructure for data sharing in the Earth Science community based on a service-oriented architecture. The project defines a standard "software stack", which includes a standardized set of software modules and corresponding service interfaces. The system employs Grid certificates for distributed user authentication. The GEON Portal provides online access to these services via a set of portlets. This service-oriented approach has enabled the GEON network to easily expand to new sites and deploy the same infrastructure in new projects. To facilitate interoperation with other distributed geoinformatics environments, service standards are being defined and implemented for catalog services and federated search across distributed catalogs. The need arises because there may be multiple metadata catalogs in a distributed system, for example, for each institution, agency, geographic region, and/or country. Ideally, a geoinformatics user should be able to search across all such catalogs by making a single search request. In this paper, we describe our implementation for such a search capability across federated metadata catalogs in the GEON service-oriented architecture. The GEON catalog can be searched using spatial, temporal, and other metadata-based search criteria. The search can be invoked as a Web service and, thus, can be imbedded in any software application. The need for federated catalogs in GEON arises because, (i) GEON collaborators at the University of Hyderabad, India have deployed their own catalog, as part of the iGEON-India effort, to register information about local resources for broader access across the network, (ii) GEON collaborators in the GEO Grid (Global Earth Observations Grid) project at AIST, Japan have implemented a catalog for their ASTER data products, and (iii) we have recently deployed a search service to access all data products from the EarthScope project in the US (http://es-portal.geongrid.org), which are distributed across data archives at IRIS in Seattle, Washington, UNAVCO in Boulder, Colorado, and at the ICDP archives in GFZ, Potsdam, Germany. This service implements a "virtual" catalog--the actual/"physical" catalogs and data are stored at each of the remote locations. A federated search across all these catalogs would enable GEON users to discover data across all of these environments with a single search request. Our objective is to implement this search service via the OGC Catalog Services for the Web (CS-W) standard by providing appropriate CSW "wrappers" for each metadata catalog, as necessary. This paper will discuss technical issues in designing and deploying such a multi-catalog search service in GEON and describe an initial prototype of the federated search capability.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Mira stars discovered in LAMOST DR4 (Yao+, 2017)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yao, Y.; Liu, C.; Deng, L.; de Grijs, R.; Matsunaga, N.
2017-10-01
By the end of 2016 March, the wide-field Large sky Area Multi-Object fiber Spectroscopic Telescope (LAMOST) DR4 catalog had accumulated 7681185 spectra (R=1800), of which 6898298 were of stars. We compiled a photometrically confirmed sample of Mira variables from the Kiso Wide-Field Camera (KWFC) Intensive Survey of the Galactic Plane (KISOGP; Matsunaga 2017, arXiv:1705.08567), the American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO) International Database Variable Star Index (VSX; Watson 2006, B/vsx, version 2017-05-02; we selected stars of variability type "M"), and the SIMBAD Astronomical Database. We first cross-matched the KISOGP and VSX Miras with the LAMOST DR4 catalog. Finally, we cross-matched the DR4 catalog with the SIMBAD database. See section 2. (1 data file).
Distance determinations to shield galaxies from Hubble space telescope imaging
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
McQuinn, Kristen B. W.; Skillman, Evan D.; Cannon, John M.
The Survey of H I in Extremely Low-mass Dwarf (SHIELD) galaxies is an ongoing multi-wavelength program to characterize the gas, star formation, and evolution in gas-rich, very low-mass galaxies. The galaxies were selected from the first ∼10% of the H I Arecibo Legacy Fast ALFA (ALFALFA) survey based on their inferred low H I mass and low baryonic mass, and all systems have recent star formation. Thus, the SHIELD sample probes the faint end of the galaxy luminosity function for star-forming galaxies. Here, we measure the distances to the 12 SHIELD galaxies to be between 5 and 12 Mpc bymore » applying the tip of the red giant method to the resolved stellar populations imaged by the Hubble Space Telescope. Based on these distances, the H I masses in the sample range from 4 × 10{sup 6} to 6 × 10{sup 7} M {sub ☉}, with a median H I mass of 1 × 10{sup 7} M {sub ☉}. The tip of the red giant branch distances are up to 73% farther than flow-model estimates in the ALFALFA catalog. Because of the relatively large uncertainties of flow-model distances, we are biased toward selecting galaxies from the ALFALFA catalog where the flow model underestimates the true distances. The measured distances allow for an assessment of the native environments around the sample members. Five of the galaxies are part of the NGC 672 and NGC 784 groups, which together constitute a single structure. One galaxy is part of a larger linear ensemble of nine systems that stretches 1.6 Mpc from end to end. Three galaxies reside in regions with 1-9 neighbors, and four galaxies are truly isolated with no known system identified within a radius of 1 Mpc.« less
VizieR Online Data Catalog: IR photometry of AGNs in Swift/BAT 70 month cat. (Ichikawa+, 2017)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ichikawa, K.; Ricci, C.; Ueda, Y.; Matsuoka, K.; Toba, Y.; Kawamuro, T.; Trakhtenbrot, B.; Koss, M. J.
2017-08-01
Our initial sample contains the 834 AGNs reported in the 70 month Swift/BAT catalog (Baumgartner+ 2013, J/ApJS/207/19), 105 of which are blazars. Of the remaining 729 sources, 697 sources have secure redshift information as presented in Ricci et al. (2016, ApJ, submitted). Next, we removed galaxy pairs or interacting galaxies not resolved in the BAT survey. Further, the 606 sources located at higher galactic latitudes with |b|>10° were selected to reduce the contamination in the crowded region through IR catalog matching. (1 data file).
Multiwavelength counterparts of the point sources in the Chandra Source Catalog
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Reynolds, Michael; Civano, Francesca Maria; Fabbiano, Giuseppina; D'Abrusco, Raffaele
2018-01-01
The most recent release of the Chandra Source Catalog (CSC) version 2.0 comprises more than $\\sim$350,000 point sources, down to fluxes of $\\sim$10$^{-16}$ erg/cm$^2$/s, covering $\\sim$500 deg$^2$ of the sky, making it one of the best available X-ray catalogs to date. There are many reasons to have multiwavelength counterparts for sources, one such reason is that X-ray information alone is not enough to identify the sources and divide them between galactic and extragalactic origin, therefore multiwavelength data associated to each X-ray source is crucial for classification and scientific analysis of the sample. To perform this multiwavelength association, we are going to employ the recently released versatile tool NWAY (Salvato et al. 2017), based on a Bayesian algorithm for cross-matching multiple catalogs. NWAY allows the combination of multiple catalogs at the same time, provides a probability for the matches, even in case of non-detection due to different depth of the matching catalogs, and it can be used by including priors on the nature of the sources (e.g. colors, magnitudes, etc). In this poster, we are presenting the preliminary analysis using the CSC sources above the galactic plane matched to the WISE All-Sky catalog, SDSS, Pan-STARRS and GALEX.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Red supergiant population in Perseus arm (Dorda+, 2018)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Dorda, R.; Negueruela, I.; Gonzalez-Fernandez, C.
2018-03-01
The targets were observed during two different campaigns. The first one was done in 2011, on the nights of October 16-18. The second campaign was carried out in 2012, from September 3rd to 7th. We used the Intermediate Dispersion Spectrograph, mounted on the 2.5 m Isaac Newton Telescope (INT) in La Palma (Spain). In total, we observed 637 unique targets, 102 in 2011 and 535 in 2012, without any overlap between epochs. As discussed above, 43 of them are CSGs with well-determined SpTs (all but one observed in the 2012 run) that were included in the calibration sample of Paper III (see appendix B in that work). These objects are not considered part of the Perseus sample studied here. This leaves 594 targets in our sample, which are detailed in perseus.dat file. (1 data file).
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Taylor, Edward N.; Franx, Marijn; Quadri, Ryan F.
2009-08-01
We present a new, K-selected, optical-to-near infrared photometric catalog of the Extended Chandra Deep Field South (ECDFS), making it publicly available to the astronomical community.{sup 22}Imaging and spectroscopy data and catalogs are freely available through the MUSYC Public Data Release webpage: http://www.astro.yale.edu/MUSYC/. The data set is founded on publicly available imaging, supplemented by original z'JK imaging data collected as part of the MUltiwavelength Survey by Yale-Chile (MUSYC). The final photometric catalog consists of photometry derived from UU {sub 38} BVRIz'JK imaging covering the full 1/2 x 1/2 square circ of the ECDFS, plus H-band photometry for approximately 80% of themore » field. The 5{sigma} flux limit for point sources is K{sup (AB)}{sub tot}= 22.0. This is also the nominal completeness and reliability limit of the catalog: the empirical completeness for 21.75 < K < 22.00 is {approx}>85%. We have verified the quality of the catalog through both internal consistency checks, and comparisons to other existing and publicly available catalogs. As well as the photometric catalog, we also present catalogs of photometric redshifts and rest-frame photometry derived from the 10-band photometry. We have collected robust spectroscopic redshift determinations from published sources for 1966 galaxies in the catalog. Based on these sources, we have achieved a (1{sigma}) photometric redshift accuracy of {delta}z/(1 + z) = 0.036, with an outlier fraction of 7.8%. Most of these outliers are X-ray sources. Finally, we describe and release a utility for interpolating rest-frame photometry from observed spectral energy distributions, dubbed InterRest.{sup 23}InterRest is available via http://www.strw.leidenuniv.nl/{approx}ent/InterRest. Documentation and a complete walkthrough can be found at the same address.« less
Subject Access Points in the MARC Record and Archival Finding Aid: Enough or Too Many?
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Cox, Elizabeth; Czechowski, Leslie
2007-01-01
In this research project, the authors set out to discover the current practice in both the archival and cataloging worlds for usage of access points in descriptive records and to learn how archival descriptive practices fit into long-established library cataloging procedures and practices. A sample of archival finding aids and MARC records at 123…
MSX Colors of Radio-Selected HII Regions in the Milky Way
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Giveon, U.; Becker, R. H.; Helfand, D. J.; White, R. L.
2003-12-01
Investigation of the color-space properties of mid-infrared sources in the MSX Galactic plane catalog reveals two distinct populations - a blue population composed mainly of evolved stars, masers and molecular clouds, and a red population comprising sources of a nebular nature - HII regions, planetary nebulae, and unclassified radio sources. We compare the MSX catalog to 5 GHz VLA maps of the first quadrant of the Galactic plane. A catalog extracted from these maps was published first by Becker et al., but we have re-reduced the data with significantly improved calibration and mosaicing procedures, resulting in an increase of ˜ 60% in the number of detected sources. Comparison of the radio and infrared catalogs resulted in a sample of 491 matches, out of which we estimate 38 to be false counterparts, all of them from the MSX red population. The radio sources with infrared counterparts are found to have extremely small scale height (FWHM of 14' or ˜ 35 pc), and have thermal radio spectrum. These properties suggest that the sample is dominated by HII regions, most of them are previously uncataloged. This research is supported be the National Science Foundation.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Berlind, Andreas A.; Frieman, Joshua A.; Weinberg, David H.
2006-01-01
We identify galaxy groups and clusters in volume-limited samples of the SDSS redshift survey, using a redshift-space friends-of-friends algorithm. We optimize the friends-of-friends linking lengths to recover galaxy systems that occupy the same dark matter halos, using a set of mock catalogs created by populating halos of N-body simulations with galaxies. Extensive tests with these mock catalogs show that no combination of perpendicular and line-of-sight linking lengths is able to yield groups and clusters that simultaneously recover the true halo multiplicity function, projected size distribution, and velocity dispersion. We adopt a linking length combination that yields, for galaxy groups withmore » ten or more members: a group multiplicity function that is unbiased with respect to the true halo multiplicity function; an unbiased median relation between the multiplicities of groups and their associated halos; a spurious group fraction of less than {approx}1%; a halo completeness of more than {approx}97%; the correct projected size distribution as a function of multiplicity; and a velocity dispersion distribution that is {approx}20% too low at all multiplicities. These results hold over a range of mock catalogs that use different input recipes of populating halos with galaxies. We apply our group-finding algorithm to the SDSS data and obtain three group and cluster catalogs for three volume-limited samples that cover 3495.1 square degrees on the sky. We correct for incompleteness caused by fiber collisions and survey edges, and obtain measurements of the group multiplicity function, with errors calculated from realistic mock catalogs. These multiplicity function measurements provide a key constraint on the relation between galaxy populations and dark matter halos.« less
X-RAY PROPERTIES OF THE NORTHERN GALACTIC CAP SOURCES IN THE 58 MONTH SWIFT/BAT CATALOG
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Vasudevan, Ranjan V.; Mushotzky, Richard F.; Shimizu, Thomas T.
2013-02-15
We present a detailed X-ray spectral analysis of the non-beamed, hard X-ray selected active galactic nuclei (AGNs) in the northern Galactic cap of the 58 month Swift Burst Alert Telescope (Swift/BAT) catalog, consisting of 100 AGNs with b > 50 Degree-Sign . This sky area has excellent potential for further dedicated study due to a wide range of multi-wavelength data that are already available, and we propose it as a low-redshift analog to the 'deep field' observations of AGNs at higher redshifts (e.g., CDFN/S, COSMOS, Lockman Hole). We present distributions of luminosity, absorbing column density, and other key quantities formore » the catalog. We use a consistent approach to fit new and archival X-ray data gathered from XMM-Newton, Swift/XRT, ASCA, and Swift/BAT. We probe to deeper redshifts than the 9 month BAT catalog ((z) = 0.043 compared to (z) = 0.03 for the 9 month catalog), and uncover a broader absorbing column density distribution. The fraction of obscured (log N {sub H} {>=} 22) objects in the sample is {approx}60%, and 43%-56% of the sample exhibits 'complex' 0.4-10 keV spectra. We present the properties of iron lines, soft excesses, and ionized absorbers for the subset of objects with sufficient signal-to-noise ratio. We reinforce previous determinations of the X-ray Baldwin (Iwasawa-Taniguchi) effect for iron K{alpha} lines. We also identify two distinct populations of sources; one in which a soft excess is well-detected and another where the soft excess is undetected, suggesting that the process responsible for producing the soft excess is not at work in all AGNs. The fraction of Compton-thick sources (log N {sub H} > 24.15) in our sample is {approx}9%. We find that 'hidden/buried AGNs' (which may have a geometrically thick torus or emaciated scattering regions) constitute {approx}14% of our sample, including seven objects previously not identified as hidden. Compton reflection is found to be important in a large fraction of our sample using joint XMM-Newton+BAT fits ((R) = 2.7 {+-} 0.75), indicating light bending or extremely complex absorption. High-energy cutoffs generally lie outside the BAT band (E > 200 keV) but are seen in some sources. We present the average 1-10 keV spectrum for the sample, which reproduces the 1-10 keV X-ray background slope as found for the brighter 9 month BAT AGN sample. The 2-10 keV log(N)-log(S) plot implies completeness down to fluxes a factor of {approx}4 fainter than seen in the 9 month catalog. We emphasize the utility of this northern Galactic cap sample for a wide variety of future studies on AGNs.« less
Adaptive Optics Imaging Survey of Luminous Infrared Galaxies
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Laag, E A; Canalizo, G; van Breugel, W
2006-03-13
We present high resolution imaging observations of a sample of previously unidentified far-infrared galaxies at z < 0.3. The objects were selected by cross-correlating the IRAS Faint Source Catalog with the VLA FIRST catalog and the HST Guide Star Catalog to allow for adaptive optics observations. We found two new ULIGs (with L{sub FIR} {ge} 10{sup 12} L{sub {circle_dot}}) and 19 new LIGs (with L{sub FIR} {ge} 10{sup 11} L{sub {circle_dot}}). Twenty of the galaxies in the sample were imaged with either the Lick or Keck adaptive optics systems in H or K{prime}. Galaxy morphologies were determined using the twomore » dimensional fitting program GALFIT and the residuals examined to look for interesting structure. The morphologies reveal that at least 30% are involved in tidal interactions, with 20% being clear mergers. An additional 50% show signs of possible interaction. Line ratios were used to determine powering mechanism; of the 17 objects in the sample showing clear emission lines--four are active galactic nuclei and seven are starburst galaxies. The rest exhibit a combination of both phenomena.« less
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Theissen, Christopher A.; West, Andrew A.; Dhital, Saurav, E-mail: ctheisse@bu.edu
2016-02-15
We present a photometric catalog of 8,735,004 proper motion selected low-mass stars (KML-spectral types) within the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) footprint, from the combined SDSS Data Release 10 (DR10), Two Micron All-Sky Survey (2MASS) point-source catalog (PSC), and Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) AllWISE catalog. Stars were selected using r − i, i − z, r − z, z − J, and z − W1 colors, and SDSS, WISE, and 2MASS astrometry was combined to compute proper motions. The resulting 3,518,150 stars were augmented with proper motions for 5,216,854 earlier type stars from the combined SDSS and United States Naval Observatory B1.0 catalog (USNO-B). We used SDSS+USNO-B proper motionsmore » to determine the best criteria for selecting a clean sample of stars. Only stars whose proper motions were greater than their 2σ uncertainty were included. Our Motion Verified Red Stars catalog is available through SDSS CasJobs and VizieR.« less
STT Doubles with Large Delta_M - Part VIII: Tau Per Ori Cam Mon Cnc Peg
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Knapp, Wilfried; Nanson, John
2017-04-01
The results of visual double star observing sessions suggested a pattern for STT doubles with large delta_M of being harder to resolve than would be expected based on the WDS catalog data. It was felt this might be a problem with expectations on one hand, and on the other might be an indication of a need for new precise measurements, so we decided to take a closer look at a selected sample of STT doubles and do some research. Again like for the other STT objects covered so far several of the components show parameters quite different from the current WDS data.
The first catalog of active galactic nuclei detected by the FERMI large area telescope
Abdo, A. A.; Ackermann, M.; Ajello, M.; ...
2010-04-29
Here, we present the first catalog of active galactic nuclei (AGNs) detected by the Large Area Telescope (LAT), corresponding to 11 months of data collected in scientific operation mode. The First LAT AGN Catalog (1LAC) includes 671 γ-ray sources located at high Galactic latitudes (|b|>10°) that are detected with a test statistic greater than 25 and associated statistically with AGNs. Some LAT sources are associated with multiple AGNs, and consequently, the catalog includes 709 AGNs, comprising 300 BL Lacertae objects, 296 flat-spectrum radio quasars, 41 AGNs of other types, and 72 AGNs of unknown type. We also classify the blazarsmore » based on their spectral energy distributions as archival radio, optical, and X-ray data permit. In addition to the formal 1LAC sample, we provide AGN associations for 51 low-latitude LAT sources and AGN "affiliations" (unquantified counterpart candidates) for 104 high-latitude LAT sources without AGN associations. The overlap of the 1LAC with existing γ-ray AGN catalogs (LBAS, EGRET, AGILE, Swift, INTEGRAL, TeVCat) is briefly discussed. Various properties—such as γ-ray fluxes and photon power-law spectral indices, redshifts, γ-ray luminosities, variability, and archival radio luminosities—and their correlations are presented and discussed for the different blazar classes. Lastly, we compare the 1LAC results with predictions regarding the γ-ray AGN populations, and we comment on the power of the sample to address the question of the blazar sequence.« less
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Warren, W. H., Jr.
1984-01-01
A detailed description of the machine-readable revised catalog as it is currently being distributed from the Astronomical Data Center is given. This catalog of star images was compiled from imagery obtained by the Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) Far-Ultraviolet Camera/Spectrograph (Experiments S201) operated from 21 to 23 April 1972 on the lunar surface during the Apollo 16 mission. The documentation includes a detailed data format description, a table of indigenous characteristics of the magnetic tape file, and a sample listing of data records exactly as they are presented in the machine-readable version.
CPM Pairs from LSPM so far not WDS Listed
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Knapp, Wilfried; Nanson, John
2017-04-01
The LSPM catalog (Lepine and Shara 2005) is a rich source for CPM pairs we thought already exhausted - but as we found during research for our report “A new concept for counter-checking of assumed CPM pairs” (Knapp and Nanson 2016) there are still many potential CPM pairs indicated in LSPM which as of the beginning of 2016 are not listed in the WDS catalog. A first part of about 40 such objects is presented here.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Buckland, Lawrence F.; Madden, Mary
From experimental work performed, and reported upon in this document, it is concluded that converting the New York State Library (NYSL) shelf list sample to machine readable form, and searching this shelf list using a remote access catalog are technically sound concepts though the capital costs of data conversion and system installation will be…
Documentation for the machine-readable version of the lick Saturn-Voyager Reference Star Catalogue
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Warren, W. H., Jr.
1982-01-01
The machine-readable version of the catalog is described. The catalog was prepared in order to determine accurate equatorial coordinates for reference stars in a band of sky against which cameras of the Voyager spacecraft were aligned for observations in the region of Saturn during the flyby. Tape contents and characteristics are described and a sample listing presented.
A New Sample of Cool Subdwarfs from SDSS: Properties and Kinematics
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Savcheva, Antonia S.; West, Andrew A.; Bochanski, John J.
2014-10-01
We present a new sample of M subdwarfs compiled from the seventh data release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. With 3517 new subdwarfs, this new sample significantly increases the number of spectroscopically confirmed low-mass subdwarfs. This catalog also includes 905 extreme and 534 ultra sudwarfs. We present the entire catalog, including observed and derived quantities, and template spectra created from co-added subdwarf spectra. We show color-color and reduced proper motion diagrams of the three metallicity classes, which are shown to separate from the disk dwarf population. The extreme and ultra subdwarfs are seen at larger values of reduced proper motion, as expected for more dynamically heated populations. We determine 3D kinematics for all of the stars with proper motions. The color-magnitude diagrams show a clear separation of the three metallicity classes with the ultra and extreme subdwarfs being significantly closer to the main sequence than the ordinary subdwarfs. All subdwarfs lie below (fainter) and to the left (bluer) of the main sequence. Based on the average (U, V, W) velocities and their dispersions, the extreme and ultra subdwarfs likely belong to the Galactic halo, while the ordinary subdwarfs are likely part of the old Galactic (or thick) disk. An extensive activity analysis of subdwarfs is performed using Hα emission, and 208 active subdwarfs are found. We show that while the activity fraction of subdwarfs rises with spectral class and levels off at the latest spectral classes, consistent with the behavior of M dwarfs, the extreme and ultra subdwarfs are basically flat.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Warren, Wayne H., Jr.
1990-01-01
The machine-readable version of the catalog, as it is currently being distributed from the Astronomical Data Center, is described. The Basic FK5 provides improved mean positions and proper motions for the 1535 classical fundamental stars that had been included in the FK3 and FK4 catalogs. The machine version of the catalog contains the positions and proper motions of the Basic FK5 stars for the epochs and equinoxes J2000.0 and B1950.0, the mean epochs of individual observed right ascensions and declinations used to determine the final positions, and the mean errors of the final positions and proper motions for the reported epochs. The cross identifications to other designations used for the FK5 stars that are given in the published catalog were not included in the original machine versions, but the Durchmusterung numbers have been added at the Astronomical Data Center.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: 106 Kepler ultra-short-period planets (Sanchis-Ojeda+, 2014)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sanchis-Ojeda, R.; Rappaport, S.; Winn, J. N.; Kotson, M. C.; Levine, A.; El Mellah, I.
2017-06-01
To carry out an independent search for the shortest-period planets, we used the Kepler long-cadence time-series photometric data (30 minute samples) obtained between quarters 0 and 16. A list was prepared of all ~200000 target stars for which photometry is available for at least one quarter, and the version 5.0 FITS files, which were available for all quarters, were downloaded from the STScI MAST Web site. For estimates of basic stellar properties including not only radii, but also masses and effective temperatures, we relied on the catalog of Huber et al. (2014, J/ApJS/211/2). This catalog is based on a compilation of photospheric properties derived from many different sources. Although it is not a homogeneous catalog, it likely provides the most accurate stellar parameters that are currently available. (1 data file).
The most luminous type 2 Active Galactic Nuclei of the Swift/ BAT catalog : Are they different?
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Baer, Rudolf Erik; Oh, Kyuseok; Koss, Michael; Wong, Ivy; Schawinski, Kevin
2018-01-01
We present an analysis of the most luminous obscured AGN of the Swift/BAT 70 month catalog, which is based on an all-sky survey in the 14 – 195 keV energy range. This survey identified 838 AGN. Excluding Blazars and AGN close ( |gb| < 6o ) to the Galactic plane we select a sample of the 30 most luminous type 2 AGN. We analyze their emission line properties in the optical and infrared range and their radio properties using data in the 150 MHz to 22 GHz range. We obtained their black hole masses from the Swift/ BAT 70 month catalog and from a specific observation campaign in order to analyze the relationship of their luminosity to black hole mass and their Eddington ratios. We discuss whether these most luminous type 2 AGN have common characteristics, which differentiate them from all the type 2 AGN in the 70 month catalog.
Fixing the reference frame for PPMXL proper motions using extragalactic sources
Grabowski, Kathleen; Carlin, Jeffrey L.; Newberg, Heidi Jo; ...
2015-05-27
In this study, we quantify and correct systematic errors in PPMXL proper motions using extragalactic sources from the first two LAMOST data releases and the Vèron-Cetty & Vèron Catalog of Quasars. Although the majority of the sources are from the Vèron catalog, LAMOST makes important contributions in regions that are not well-sampled by previous catalogs, particularly at low Galactic latitudes and in the south Galactic cap. We show that quasars in PPMXL have measurable and significant proper motions, which reflect the systematic zero-point offsets present in the catalog. We confirm the global proper motion shifts seen by Wu et al.,more » and additionally find smaller-scale fluctuations of the QSO-derived corrections to an absolute frame. Finally, we average the proper motions of 158 106 extragalactic objects in bins of 3° × 3° and present a table of proper motion corrections.« less
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Abundances of bright metal-poor stars (Schlaufman+, 2014)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Schlaufman, K. C.; Casey, A. R.
2016-11-01
As input to our sample selection, we use the APASS DR6 Catalog, the 2MASS All-Sky Point Source Catalog, and the AllWISE Source Catalog (Henden+ 2012JAVSO..40..430H; Skrutskie+ 2006AJ....131.1163S; Wright+ 2010AJ....140.1868W; Mainzer+ 2011ApJ...731...53M). We followed up our metal-poor star candidates with the Mayall 4m/Echelle, Gemini South/GMOS-S, and Magellan/MIKE telescopes and spectrographs. We observed 98 stars with the Mayall 4m/Echelle on 2013 June 25-27. We observed 90 stars with Gemini South/GMOS-S in service mode from 2014 March to July (R~3700). We observed 416 stars with Magellan/MIKE on 2014 June 21-23 and July 8-10 (R~41000 in the blue and R~35000 in the red). (3 data files).
VizieR Online Data Catalog: SDSS-RM project: peak velocities of QSOs (Shen+, 2016)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Shen, Y.; Brandt, W. N.; Richards, G. T.; Denney, K. D.; Greene, J. E.; Grier, C. J.; Ho, L. C.; Peterson, B. M.; Petitjean, P.; Schneider, D. P.; Tao, C.; Trump, J. R.
2017-01-01
The SDSS-RM quasar sample includes 849 broad-line quasars at 0.1
The Fermi Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (GBM) Terrestrial Gamma-ray Flash (TGF) Catalog
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Briggs, M. S.; Roberts, O.; Fitzpatrick, G.; Stanbro, M.; Cramer, E.; Mailyan, B. G.; McBreen, S.; Connaughton, V.; Grove, J. E.; Chekhtman, A.; Holzworth, R.
2017-12-01
The revised Second Fermi GBM TGF catalog includes data on 4144 TGFs detected by the Fermi Gamma-ray Burst Monitor through 2016 July 31. The catalog includes 686 bright TGFs there were detected in orbit and 4135 TGFs that were discovered by ground analysis of GBM data (the two samples overlap). Thirty of the events may have been detected as electrons and positrons rather than gamma-rays: Terrestrial Electron Beams (TEBs). We also provide results from correlating the GBM TGFs with VLF radio detections of the World Wide Lightning Location Network (WWLLN). TGFs with WWLLN associations have their localization uncertainties improved from 800 to 10 km, making it possible to identify specific thunderstorms responsible for the TGFs and opening up new types of scientific investigations. There are 1544 TGFs with WWLLN associations; maps are provided for these and the other TGFs of the catalog. The data tables of the catalog are available for use by the scientific community at the Fermi Science Support Center, at https://fermi.gsfc.nasa.gov/ssc/data/access/gbm/tgf/.
The Gaia–WISE Extragalactic Astrometric Catalog
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Paine, Jennie; Darling, Jeremy; Truebenbach, Alexandra
2018-06-01
The Gaia mission has detected a large number of active galactic nuclei (AGNs) and galaxies, but these objects must be identified among the thousandfold more numerous stars. Extant astrometric AGN catalogs do not have the uniform sky coverage required to detect and characterize the all-sky, low-multipole proper motion signals produced by the barycenter motion, gravitational waves, and cosmological effects. To remedy this, we present an all-sky sample of 567,721 AGNs in Gaia Data Release 1, selected using WISE two-color criteria. The catalog has fairly uniform sky coverage beyond the Galactic plane, with a mean density of 12.8 AGNs per square degree. The objects have magnitudes ranging from G = 8.8 down to Gaia’s magnitude limit, G = 20.7. The catalog is approximately 50% complete but suffers from low stellar contamination, roughly 0.2%. We predict that the end-of-mission Gaia proper motions for this catalog will enable detection of the secular aberration drift to high significance (23σ) and will place an upper limit on the anisotropy of the Hubble expansion of about 2%.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: GOODS-MUSIC sample: multicolour catalog (Grazian+, 2006)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Grazian, A.; Fontana, A.; de Santis, C.; Nonino, M.; Salimbeni, S.; Giallongo, E.; Cristiani, S.; Gallozzi, S.; Vanzella, E.
2006-02-01
The GOODS-MUSIC multi-wavelength catalog provides photometric and spectroscopic information for galaxies in the GOODS Southern field. It includes two U images obtained with the ESO 2.2m telescope and one U band image from VLT-VIMOS, the ACS-HST images in four optical (B,V,i,z) bands, the VLT-ISAAC J, H, and Ks bands as well as the Spitzer images in at 3.5, 4.5, 5.8, and 8 micron. Most of these images have been made publicly available in the coadded version by the GOODS team, while the U band data were retrieved in raw format and reduced by our team. We also collected all the available spectroscopic information from public spectroscopic surveys and cross-correlated the spectroscopic redshifts with our photometric catalog. For the unobserved fraction of the objects, we applied our photometric redshift code to obtain well-calibrated photometric redshifts. The final catalog is made up of 14847 objects, with at least 72 known stars, 68 AGNs, and 928 galaxies with spectroscopic redshift (668 galaxies with reliable redshift determination). (3 data files).
The first AGILE low-energy (< 30 MeV) Terrestrial Gamma-ray Flashes catalog
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Marisaldi, Martino; Fuschino, Fabio; Pittori, Carlotta; Verrecchia, Francesco; Giommi, Paolo; Tavani, Marco; Dietrich, Stefano; Price, Colin; Argan, Andrea; Labanti, Claudio; Galli, Marcello; Longo, Francesco; Del Monte, Ettore; Barbiellini, Guido; Giuliani, Andrea; Bulgarelli, Andrea; Gianotti, Fulvio; Trifoglio, Massimo; Trois, Alessio
2014-05-01
We present the first catalog of Terrestrial Gamma-ray Flashes (TGFs) detected by the Minicalorimeter (MCAL) instrument on-board the AGILE satellite. The catalog includes 308 TGFs detected during the period March 2009 - July 2012 in the +/- 2.5° latitude band and selected to have the maximum photon energy up to 30 MeV. The characteristics of the AGILE events are analysed and compared to the observational framework established by the two other currently active missions capable of detecting TGFs from space, RHESSI and Fermi. A detailed model of the MCAL dead time is presented, which is fundamental to properly interpret our observations, particularly concerning duration, intensity and correlation with lightning sferics detected by the World Wide Lightning Location Network. The TGFs cumulative spectrum supports a low production altitude, in agreement with previous measurements. The AGILE TGF catalog below 30 MeV is publicly accessible online at the website of the ASI Science Data Center (ASDC) http://www.asdc.asi.it/mcaltgfcat/ In addition to the TGF sample properties we also present the catalog website functionalities available to users.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Hα emission in nearby M dwarfs (Newton+, 2017)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Newton, E. R.; Irwin, J.; Charbonneau, D.; Berlind, P.; Calkins, M. L.; Mink, J.
2017-06-01
Our sample of M dwarfs is drawn from the MEarth Project, an all-sky survey looking for transiting planets around approximately 3000 nearby, mid-to-late M dwarfs. Nutzman & Charbonneau (2008PASP..120..317N) selected the northern MEarth targets from the Lepine & Shara (2005, I/298) northern proper motion catalog (hereafter the "nearby northern M dwarf" sample). MEarth-North is located at the Fred Lawrence Whipple Observatory (FLWO), on Mount Hopkins, Arizona, and has been operational since 2008 September. The observatory comprises eight 40cm telescopes. This work utilizes results from MEarth-North and from our further spectroscopic characterization of the sample. Compiled and new rotation period and Hα measurements are included in Table 1. (1 data file).
VizieR Online Data Catalog: ETGs sample for the Coma cluster (Riguccini+, 2015)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Riguccini, L.; Temi, P.; Amblard, A.; Fanelli, M.; Brighenti, F.
2017-10-01
For the Coma Cluster, we utilize the work of Mahajan et al. (2010, J/MNRAS/404/1745) to build our ETG sample. Mahajan et al. (2010, J/MNRAS/404/1745) used a combination of MIPS 24 μm observations and SDSS photometry and spectra to investigate the star formation history of galaxies in the Coma supercluster. All of their galaxies from the SDSS data in the Coma supercluster region are brighter than r~17.77, the completeness limit of the SDSS spectroscopic galaxy catalog. Their 24 μm fluxes are obtained from archival data covering 2x2 deg2 for Coma Cluster. Our final sample of 124 sources is composed of 49 ellipticals and 75 lenticulars. (1 data file).
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
The U.S. Geological Survey recently published the seventh edition of the index to the information catalog on surface and ground water data. The data, collected at more than 100,000 sites across the country, are based on information provided by federal, state, and local agencies. The index also includes data for parts of Canada and Mexico.The catalog does not contain the actual data, but it does provide information on where and by whom data are being collected, the types of data acquired, and how to obtain the data.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Yano, Tomoko E.; Takeda, Tetsuya; Matsubara, Makoto; Shiomi, Katsuhiko
2017-04-01
We have generated a high-resolution catalog called the ;Japan Unified hIgh-resolution relocated Catalog for Earthquakes; (JUICE), which can be used to evaluate the geometry and seismogenic depth of active faults in Japan. We relocated > 1.1 million hypocenters from the NIED Hi-net catalog for events which occurred between January 2001 and December 2012, to a depth of 40 km. We apply a relative hypocenter determination method to the data in each grid square, in which entire Japan is divided into 1257 grid squares to parallelize the relocation procedure. We used a double-difference method, incorporating cross-correlating differential times as well as catalog differential times. This allows us to resolve, in detail, a seismicity distribution for the entire Japanese Islands. We estimated location uncertainty by a statistical resampling method, using Jackknife samples, and show that the uncertainty can be within 0.37 km in the horizontal and 0.85 km in the vertical direction with a 90% confidence interval for areas with good station coverage. Our seismogenic depth estimate agrees with the lower limit of the hypocenter distribution for a recent earthquake on the Kamishiro fault (2014, Mj 6.7), which suggests that the new catalog should be useful for estimating the size of future earthquakes for inland active faults.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Johnson, Elizabeth; Strolger, Louis-Gregory; Engle, Scott G.; Anderson, Richard I.; Rest, Armin; Calamida, Annalisa; Dosovitz Fox, Ori; Laney, David
2017-01-01
Cepheid and RR Lyrae stars are an integral part of the cosmic distance ladder and are also useful for studying galactic structure and stellar ages. This project aims to greatly expand the number of known periodic variables in our galaxy by identifying candidates in the PanSTARRS-1 3pi catalog, and carrying out systematically targeted characterization with robotically controlled telescopes. Candidate targets are selected from available detection tables based on color and variability indices and are then fully vetted using robotic telescopes: the RCT 1.3 meter (Kitt Peak National Observatory) and RATIR 1.5 meter (Mexico). Here we present work to develop a full, semi-automated prescription for candidate selection, targeted follow-up photometry, cataloging, and classification, which allows the review of approximately 25 variable candidates every two weeks. We make comparisons of our sample selection and purity from a similar study based on Pan-STARRS data (Hernitschek et al. 2016), as well as candidates identified in Gaia DR1. The goal, through continued observation and analysis, is to identify at least 10,000 new variables, hundreds of which will be new Cepheid and RR Lyrae stars.
The cluster-cluster correlation function. [of galaxies
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Postman, M.; Geller, M. J.; Huchra, J. P.
1986-01-01
The clustering properties of the Abell and Zwicky cluster catalogs are studied using the two-point angular and spatial correlation functions. The catalogs are divided into eight subsamples to determine the dependence of the correlation function on distance, richness, and the method of cluster identification. It is found that the Corona Borealis supercluster contributes significant power to the spatial correlation function to the Abell cluster sample with distance class of four or less. The distance-limited catalog of 152 Abell clusters, which is not greatly affected by a single system, has a spatial correlation function consistent with the power law Xi(r) = 300r exp -1.8. In both the distance class four or less and distance-limited samples the signal in the spatial correlation function is a power law detectable out to 60/h Mpc. The amplitude of Xi(r) for clusters of richness class two is about three times that for richness class one clusters. The two-point spatial correlation function is sensitive to the use of estimated redshifts.
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2012-04-25
... a 30-day public comment period, on January 7, 2011 in the Federal Register (76 FR 1210). No comments... Management System (FDMS) Web site at: http://www.regulations.gov/ . Then follow the online search... seat belt parts, the dealer must refer to the Mitsubishi parts catalog to identify the ordering part...
From Field to the Web: Management and Publication of Geoscience Samples in CSIRO Mineral Resources
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Devaraju, A.; Klump, J. F.; Tey, V.; Fraser, R.; Reid, N.; Brown, A.; Golodoniuc, P.
2016-12-01
Inaccessible samples are an obstacle to the reproducibility of research and may cause waste of time and resources through duplication of sample collection and management. Within the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) Mineral Resources there are various research communities who collect or generate physical samples as part of their field studies and analytical processes. Materials can be varied and could be rock, soil, plant materials, water, and even synthetic materials. Given the wide range of applications in CSIRO, each researcher or project may follow their own method of collecting, curating and documenting samples. In many cases samples and their documentation are often only available to the sample collector. For example, the Australian Resources Research Centre stores rock samples and research collections dating as far back as the 1970s. Collecting these samples again would be prohibitively expensive and in some cases impossible because the site has been mined out. These samples would not be easily discoverable by others without an online sample catalog. We identify some of the organizational and technical challenges to provide unambiguous and systematic access to geoscience samples, and present their solutions (e.g., workflow, persistent identifier and tools). We present the workflow starting from field sampling to sample publication on the Web, and describe how the International Geo Sample Number (IGSN) can be applied to identify samples along the process. In our test case geoscientific samples are collected as part of the Capricorn Distal Footprints project, a collaboration project between the CSIRO, the Geological Survey of Western Australia, academic institutions and industry partners. We conclude by summarizing the values of our solutions in terms of sample management and publication.
Spitzer Photometry of WISE-Selected Brown Dwarf and Hyper-Lumninous Infrared Galaxy Candidates
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Griffith, Roger L.; Kirkpatrick, J. Davy; Eisenhardt, Peter R. M.; Gelino, Christopher R.; Cushing, Michael C.; Benford, Dominic; Blain, Andrew; Bridge, Carrie R.; Cohen, Martin; Cutri, Roc M.;
2012-01-01
We present Spitzer 3.6 and 4.5 micrometer photometry and positions for a sample of 1510 brown dwarf candidates identified by the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) all-sky survey. Of these, 166 have been spectroscopically classified as objects with spectral types M(1), L(7), T(146), and Y(12). Sixteen other objects are non-(sub)stellar in nature. The remainder are most likely distant L and T dwarfs lacking spectroscopic verification, other Y dwarf candidates still awaiting follow-up, and assorted other objects whose Spitzer photometry reveals them to be background sources. We present a catalog of Spitzer photometry for all astrophysical sources identified in these fields and use this catalog to identify seven fainter (4.5 m to approximately 17.0 mag) brown dwarf candidates, which are possibly wide-field companions to the original WISE sources. To test this hypothesis, we use a sample of 919 Spitzer observations around WISE-selected high-redshift hyper-luminous infrared galaxy candidates. For this control sample, we find another six brown dwarf candidates, suggesting that the seven companion candidates are not physically associated. In fact, only one of these seven Spitzer brown dwarf candidates has a photometric distance estimate consistent with being a companion to the WISE brown dwarf candidate. Other than this, there is no evidence for any widely separated (greater than 20 AU) ultra-cool binaries. As an adjunct to this paper, we make available a source catalog of 7.33 x 10(exp 5) objects detected in all of these Spitzer follow-up fields for use by the astronomical community. The complete catalog includes the Spitzer 3.6 and 4.5 m photometry, along with positionally matched B and R photometry from USNO-B; J, H, and Ks photometry from Two Micron All-Sky Survey; and W1, W2, W3, and W4 photometry from the WISE all-sky catalog.
The large bright quasar survey. 6: Quasar catalog and survey parameters
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hewett, Paul C.; Foltz, Craig B.; Chaffee, Frederic H.
1995-04-01
Positions, redshifts, and magnitudes for the 1055 quasars in the Large Bright Quasar Survey (LBQS) are presented in a single catalog. Celestial positions have been derived using the PPM catalog to provide an improved reference frame. J2000.0 coordinates are given together with improved b1950.0 positions. Redshifts calculated via cross correlation with a high signal-to-noise ratio composite quasar spectrum are included and the small number of typographic and redshift misidentifications in the discovery papers are corrected. Spectra of the 12 quasars added to the sample since the publication of the discovery papers are included. Discriptions of the plate material, magnitude calibration, quasar candidate selection procedures, and the identification spectroscopy are given. Calculation of the effective area of the survey for the 1055 quasars comprising the well-defined LBQS sample specified in detail. Number-redshift and number-magnitude relations for the quasars are derived and the strengths and limitastions of the LBSQ sample summarized. Comparison with existing surveys is made and a qualitative assessment of the effectiveness of the LBQS undertaken. Positions, magnitudes, and optical spectra of the eight objects (less than 1%) in the survey that remain unidentified are also presented.
Vehicle catalog : a compendium of vehicles and powertrain systems for bus rapid transit service
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2006-01-01
This report represents one part of an effort to provide information to the U.S. transit : authorities on activities related to Bus Rapid Transit (BRT). This document is prepared in : partnership with the Federal Transit Administration as part of a ...
STT Doubles with Large DM - Part IV: Ophiuchus and Hercules
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Knapp, Wilfried; Nanson, John
2016-04-01
The results of visual double star observing sessions suggested a pattern for STT doubles with large DM of being harder to resolve than would be expected based on the WDS catalog data. It was felt this might be a problem with expectations on one hand, and on the other might be an indication of a need for new precise measurements, so we decided to take a closer look at a selected sample of STT doubles and do some research. We found that like in the other constellations covered so far (Gem, Leo, UMa, etc.) at least several of the selected objects in Ophiuchus and Hercules show parameters quite different from the current WDS data.
STT Doubles with Large DM - Part V: Aquila, Delphinus, Cygnus, Aquarius
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Knapp, Wilfried; Nanson, John
2016-07-01
The results of visual double star observing sessions suggested a pattern for STT doubles with large DM of being harder to resolve than would be expected based on the WDS catalog data. It was felt this might be a problem with expectations on one hand, and on the other might be an indication of a need for new precise measurements, so we decided to take a closer look at a selected sample of STT doubles and do some research. We found that, as in the other constellations covered so far (Gem, Leo, UMa etc.), at least several of the selected objects in Aql, Del, Cyg and Aqr show parameters quite different from the current WDS data
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Orbital parameters of Kuiper Belt objects (Volk+, 2017)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Volk, K.; Malhotra, R.
2017-11-01
Our starting point is the list of minor planets in the outer solar system cataloged in the database of the Minor Planet Center (http://www.minorplanetcenter.net/iau/lists/t_centaurs.html and http://www.minorplanetcenter.net/iau/lists/t_tnos.html) as of 2016 October 20. The complete listing of our sample, including best-fit orbital parameters and sky locations, is provided in Table1. (1 data file).
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Diantari, H. C.; Suryanto, W.; Anggraini, A.; Irnaka, T. M.; Susilanto, P.; Ngadmanto, D.
2018-03-01
We present a magnitude of completeness (Mc) quantification based on BMKG improved earthquake catalog which generated from Ina-TEWS seismograph network. The Mc quantification can help us determine the lowest magnitude which can be recorded perfectly as a function of space and time. We use the BMKG improved earthquake catalog from 2008 to 2016 which has been converted to moment magnitude (Mw) and declustered. The value of Mc is computed by determining the initial point of deviation patterns in Frequency Magnitude Distribution (FMD) chart following the Gutenberg-Richter equations. In the next step, we calculate the temporal variation of Mc and b-value using maximum likelihood method annually. We found that the Mc value is decreasing and produced a varying b-value. It indicates that the development of seismograph network from 2008 to 2016 can affect the value of Mc although it is not significant. We analyze temporal variation of Mc value, and correlate it with the spatial distribution of seismograph in Indonesia. The spatial distribution of seismograph installation shows that the western part of Indonesia has more dense seismograph compared to the eastern region. However, the eastern part of Indonesia has a high level of seismicity compared to the western region. Based upon the results, additional seismograph installation in the eastern part of Indonesia should be taken into consideration.
41 CFR 101-30.000 - Scope of part.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-07-01
... 41 Public Contracts and Property Management 2 2014-07-01 2012-07-01 true Scope of part. 101-30.000 Section 101-30.000 Public Contracts and Property Management Federal Property Management Regulations System FEDERAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS SUPPLY AND PROCUREMENT 30-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM § 101-30.000...
41 CFR 101-30.000 - Scope of part.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-07-01
... 41 Public Contracts and Property Management 2 2010-07-01 2010-07-01 true Scope of part. 101-30.000 Section 101-30.000 Public Contracts and Property Management Federal Property Management Regulations System FEDERAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS SUPPLY AND PROCUREMENT 30-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM § 101-30.000...
41 CFR 101-30.000 - Scope of part.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-07-01
... 41 Public Contracts and Property Management 2 2011-07-01 2007-07-01 true Scope of part. 101-30.000 Section 101-30.000 Public Contracts and Property Management Federal Property Management Regulations System FEDERAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS SUPPLY AND PROCUREMENT 30-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM § 101-30.000...
41 CFR 101-30.000 - Scope of part.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-07-01
... Regulations System FEDERAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS SUPPLY AND PROCUREMENT 30-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM... personnel in managing these items of supply, a prerequisite for integrated item management under the Federal... 41 Public Contracts and Property Management 2 2012-07-01 2012-07-01 false Scope of part. 101-30...
Redefining the School District in America. Part Three of a Three-Part Series
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Smith, Nelson
2015-01-01
In "Redefining the School District in America," Nelson Smith reexamines existing recovery school districts (RSDs)--entities in Louisiana, Tennessee, and Michigan charged with running and turning around their state's worst schools--and assembles the most comprehensive catalog of similar initiatives underway and under consideration…
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Shelly, David R.
2017-05-01
Low-frequency earthquakes (LFEs) are small, rapidly recurring slip events that occur on the deep extensions of some major faults. Their collective activation is often observed as a semicontinuous signal known as tectonic (or nonvolcanic) tremor. This manuscript presents a catalog of more than 1 million LFEs detected along the central San Andreas Fault from 2001 to 2016. These events have been detected via a multichannel matched-filter search, cross-correlating waveform templates representing 88 different LFE families with continuous seismic data. Together, these source locations span nearly 150 km along the central San Andreas Fault, ranging in depth from 16 to 30 km. This accumulating catalog has been the source for numerous studies examining the behavior of these LFE sources and the inferred slip behavior of the deep fault. The relatively high temporal and spatial resolutions of the catalog have provided new insights into properties such as tremor migration, recurrence, and triggering by static and dynamic stress perturbations. Collectively, these characteristics are inferred to reflect a very weak fault likely under near-lithostatic fluid pressure, yet the physical processes controlling the stuttering rupture observed as tremor and LFE signals remain poorly understood. This paper aims to document the LFE catalog assembly process and associated caveats, while also updating earlier observations and inferred physical constraints. The catalog itself accompanies this manuscript as part of the electronic supplement, with the goal of providing a useful resource for continued future investigations.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Zwicky Galaxy Catalog (Zwicky+ 1968)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Zwicky, F.; et al.
1996-03-01
This document describes a computer version of that part of the CGCG (Zwicky et al. 1961-68) containing all the alphanumeric information for galaxies. All known errors found by Zwicky and many others are corrected as well as erroneous quotations from other catalogs (Shapley & Ames 1932, Bigay 1951, Pettit 1954, Humason et al. 1956, Holmberg 1958). It is an illusion to consider all the errors are found. There are some misprints even in the most extended list of misprints (Paturel et al. 1991). We have compiled two files: zwigal.ori and zwigal.add. The first one contains the original information from CGCG for galaxies. The second one contains the data from above mentioned other catalogs given in CGCG. We have made no attempts to supply the catalog with any new information. A detailed comparison with the machine-readable version of Zwicky galaxies prepared by R.S. Hill (NSSDC ADC #7049 or CDS VII/49) was performed. Our version contains more data on individual galaxies - designation, description, magnitudes, velocity. All galaxies in the Coma center are included. However Hill's version contains data for Zwicky fields, Palomar Sky Survey plate number as well as Mead-Luyten-Palomar number. There are 27837 different galaxies and 29418 entries in CGCG. (2 data files).
IRAS variables as galactic structure tracers - Classification of the bright variables
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Allen, L. E.; Kleinmann, S. G.; Weinberg, M. D.
1993-01-01
The characteristics of the 'bright infrared variables' (BIRVs), a sample consisting of the 300 brightest stars in the IRAS Point Source Catalog with IRAS variability index VAR of 98 or greater, are investigated with the purpose of establishing which of IRAS variables are AGB stars (e.g., oxygen-rich Miras and carbon stars, as was assumed by Weinberg (1992)). Results of the analysis of optical, infrared, and microwave spectroscopy of these stars indicate that, out of 88 stars in the BIRV sample identified with cataloged variables, 86 can be classified as Miras. Results of a similar analysis performed for a color-selected sample of stars, using the color limits employed by Habing (1988) to select AGB stars, showed that, out of 52 percent of classified stars, 38 percent are non-AGB stars, including H II regions, planetary nebulae, supergiants, and young stellar objects, indicating that studies using color-selected samples are subject to misinterpretation.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... booklet, menu, wine card, leaflet, circular, mailer, book insert, catalog, promotional material, sales....42 of this part. (b) Any editorial or other reading material (i.e., news release) in any periodical...
Demographics of Isolated Galaxies along the Hubble Sequence
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Khim, Hong-geun; Park, Jongwon; Seo, Seong-Woo; Lee, Jaehyun; Smith, Rory; Yi, Sukyoung K.
2015-09-01
Isolated galaxies in low-density regions are significant in the sense that they are least affected by the hierarchical pattern of galaxy growth and interactions with perturbers, at least for the last few gigayears. To form a comprehensive picture of the star-formation history of isolated galaxies, we constructed a catalog of isolated galaxies and their comparison sample in relatively denser environments. The galaxies are drawn from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 7 in the redshift range of 0.025\\lt z\\lt 0.044. We performed a visual inspection and classified their morphology following the Hubble classification scheme. For the spectroscopic study, we make use of the catalog provided by Oh et al. in 2011. We confirm most of the earlier understanding on isolated galaxies. The most remarkable additional results are as follows. Isolated galaxies are dominantly late type with the morphology distribution (E:S0:S:Irr) = (9.9:11.3:77.6:1.2)%. The frequency of elliptical galaxies among isolated galaxies is only a third of that of the comparison sample. Most of the photometric and spectroscopic properties are surprisingly similar between the isolated and comparison samples. However, early-type isolated galaxies are less massive by 50% and younger (by Hβ) by 20% than their counterparts in the comparison sample. This can be explained as a result of different merger and star-formation histories for differing environments in the hierarchical merger paradigm. We provide an online catalog for the list and properties of our sample galaxies.
Basic Use of SExtractor Catalogs With TweakR eg - I
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lucas, Ray A.; Hilbert, Bryan
2015-05-01
We describe using external SExtractor (v2.8.6) catalogs from crclean.fits images to align ACS/WFC images with DrizzlePac/TweakReg. Note that this example was originally created before a more recent update to ACS/WFC geometric distortion files. At the time of this writing, one must follow the advice on the ACS Geometric Distortion web page as the first step in the process. By late 2015, as part of OPUS 2015.3, this part will be included by default in the standard pipeline processing and this will no longer need to be manually done by the user. We describe the rest of the process of preparing images for SExtractor, running SExtractor, and using the ouput catalogs to feed to the TweakReg task for alignment, and show that reasonably good first-cut results can be obtained with mostly default parameters in SExtractor and TweakReg. Better results may be possible with more exacting methods. This describes a method for quick alignment, not the ultimate best alignment. Note also that the use of crclean.fits images may be more suited to provide better results for ACS/WFC and WFC3/UVIS than for WFC3/IR.
A spatial data handling system for retrieval of images by unrestricted regions of user interest
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Dorfman, Erik; Cromp, Robert F.
1992-01-01
The Intelligent Data Management (IDM) project at NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center has prototyped an Intelligent Information Fusion System (IIFS), which automatically ingests metadata from remote sensor observations into a large catalog which is directly queryable by end-users. The greatest challenge in the implementation of this catalog was supporting spatially-driven searches, where the user has a possible complex region of interest and wishes to recover those images that overlap all or simply a part of that region. A spatial data management system is described, which is capable of storing and retrieving records of image data regardless of their source. This system was designed and implemented as part of the IIFS catalog. A new data structure, called a hypercylinder, is central to the design. The hypercylinder is specifically tailored for data distributed over the surface of a sphere, such as satellite observations of the Earth or space. Operations on the hypercylinder are regulated by two expert systems. The first governs the ingest of new metadata records, and maintains the efficiency of the data structure as it grows. The second translates, plans, and executes users' spatial queries, performing incremental optimization as partial query results are returned.
The Second SWIFT Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) Gamma-Ray Burst Catalog
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Sakamoto, T.; Barthelmy, S. D.; Baumgartner, W. H.; Cummings, J. R.; Fenimore, E. E.; Gehrels, N.; Krimm, H. A.; Markwardt, C. B.; Palmer, D. M.; Parsons, A. M.;
2012-01-01
We present the second Swift Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) catalog of gamma-ray bursts. (GRBs), which contains 476 bursts detected by the BAT between 2004 December 19 and 2009 December 21. This catalog (hereafter the BAT2 catalog) presents burst trigger time, location, 90% error radius, duration, fluence, peak flux, time-averaged spectral parameters and time-resolved spectral parameters measured by the BAT. In the correlation study of various observed parameters extracted from the BAT prompt emission data, we distinguish among long-duration GRBs (L-GRBs), short-duration GRBs (S-GRBs), and short-duration GRBs with extended emission (S-GRBs with E.E.) to investigate differences in the prompt emission properties. The fraction of L-GRBs, S-GRBs and S-GRBs with E.E. in the catalog are 89%, 8% and 2% respectively. We compare the BAT prompt emission properties with the BATSE, BeppoSAX and HETE-2 GRB samples.. We also correlate the observed prompt emission properties with the redshifts for the GRBs with known redshift. The BAT T(sub 90) and T(sub 50) durations peak at 70 s and 30 s, respectively. We confirm that the spectra of the BAT S-GRBs are generally harder than those of the L-GRBs.
A Catalog of 1022 Bright Contact Binary Stars
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gettel, S. J.; Geske, M. T.; McKay, T. A.
2006-01-01
In this work we describe a large new sample of contact binary stars extracted in a uniform manner from sky patrol data taken by the ROTSE-I telescope. Extensive ROTSE-I light-curve data are combined with J-, H-, and K-band near-infrared data taken from the Two Micron All Sky Survey to add color information. Contact binary candidates are selected using the observed period-color relation. Candidates are confirmed by visual examination of the light curves. To enhance the utility of this catalog, we derive a new J-H period-color-luminosity relation and use this to estimate distances for the entire catalog. From these distance estimates we derive an estimated contact binary space density of (1.7+/-0.6)×10-5 pc-3.
Catalog of Mount St. Helens 2004 - 2005 Tephra Samples with Major- and Trace-Element Geochemistry
Rowe, Michael C.; Thornber, Carl R.; Gooding, Daniel J.; Pallister, John S.
2008-01-01
This open-file report presents a catalog of information about 135 ash samples along with geochemical analyses of bulk ash, glass and individual mineral grains from tephra deposited as a result of volcanic activity at Mount St. Helens, Washington, from October 1, 2004 until August 15, 2005. This data, in conjunction with that in a companion report on 2004?2007 Mount St. Helens dome samples by Thornber and others (2008a) are presented in support of the contents of the U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1750 (Sherrod and others, ed., 2008). Readers are referred to appropriate chapters in USGS Professional Paper 1750 for detailed narratives of eruptive activity during this time period and for interpretations of sample characteristics and geochemical data presented here. All ash samples reported herein are currently archived at the David A. Johnston Cascades Volcano Observatory in Vancouver, Washington. The Mount St. Helens 2004?2005 Tephra Sample Catalogue along with bulk, glass and mineral geochemistry are tabulated in 6 worksheets of the accompanying Microsoft Excel file, of2008-1131.xls. Samples in all tables are organized by collection date. Table 1 is a detailed catalog of sample information for tephra deposited downwind of Mount St. Helens between October 1, 2004 and August 18, 2005. Table 2 provides major- and trace-element analyses of 8 bulk tephra samples collected throughout that interval. Major-element compositions of 82 groundmass glass fragments, 420 feldspar grains, and 213 mafic (clinopyroxene, amphibole, hypersthene, and olivine) mineral grains from 12 ash samples collected between October 1, 2004 and March 8, 2005 are presented in tables 3 through 5. In addition, trace-element abundances of 198 feldspars from 11 ash samples (same samples as major-element analyses) are provided in table 6. Additional mineral and bulk ash analyses from 2004 and 2005 ash samples are published in chapters 30 (oxide thermometry; Pallister and others, 2008), 32 (amphibole major elements; Thornber and others, 2008b) and 37 (210Pb; 210Pb/226Pa; Reagan and others, 2008) of U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1750 (Sherrod and others, 2008). A brief overview of sample collection methods is given below as an aid to deciphering the tephra sample catalog. This is followed by an explanation of the categories of sample information (column headers) in table 1. A summary of the analytical methods used to obtain the geochemical data in this report introduces the presentation of major- and trace-element geochemistry of Mount St. Helens 2004?2005 tephra samples in tables 2?6. Rhyolite glass standard analyses are reported (Appendix 1) to demonstrate the accuracy and precision of similar glass analyses presented herein.
Preliminary catalog of pictures taken on the lunar surface during the Apollo 16 mission
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Batson, R. M.; Carson, K. B.; Reed, V. S.; Tyner, R. L.
1972-01-01
A catalog of all pictures taken from the lunar module or the lunar surface during the Apollo 16 lunar stay is presented. The tabulations are arranged for the following specific uses: (1) given the number of a particular frame, find its location in the sequence of lunar surface activity, the station from which it was taken and the subject matter of the picture; (2) given a particular location or activity within the sequence of lunar surface activity, find the pictures taken at that time and their subject matter; and (3) given a sample number from the voice transcript listed, find the designation assigned to the same sample by the lunar receiving laboratory.
Jasinska, Anna J; Zelaya, Ivette; Service, Susan K; Peterson, Christine B; Cantor, Rita M; Choi, Oi-Wa; DeYoung, Joseph; Eskin, Eleazar; Fairbanks, Lynn A; Fears, Scott; Furterer, Allison E; Huang, Yu S; Ramensky, Vasily; Schmitt, Christopher A; Svardal, Hannes; Jorgensen, Matthew J; Kaplan, Jay R; Villar, Diego; Aken, Bronwen L; Flicek, Paul; Nag, Rishi; Wong, Emily S; Blangero, John; Dyer, Thomas D; Bogomolov, Marina; Benjamini, Yoav; Weinstock, George M; Dewar, Ken; Sabatti, Chiara; Wilson, Richard K; Jentsch, J David; Warren, Wesley; Coppola, Giovanni; Woods, Roger P; Freimer, Nelson B
2017-12-01
By analyzing multitissue gene expression and genome-wide genetic variation data in samples from a vervet monkey pedigree, we generated a transcriptome resource and produced the first catalog of expression quantitative trait loci (eQTLs) in a nonhuman primate model. This catalog contains more genome-wide significant eQTLs per sample than comparable human resources and identifies sex- and age-related expression patterns. Findings include a master regulatory locus that likely has a role in immune function and a locus regulating hippocampal long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs), whose expression correlates with hippocampal volume. This resource will facilitate genetic investigation of quantitative traits, including brain and behavioral phenotypes relevant to neuropsychiatric disorders.
A catalog of observed nuclear magnitudes of Jupiter family comets
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Tancredi, G.; Fernández, J. A.; Rickman, H.; Licandro, J.
2000-10-01
A catalog of a sample of 105 Jupiter family (JF) comets (defined as those with Tisserand constants T > 2 and orbital periods P < 20 yr) is presented with our ``best estimates'' of their absolute nuclear magnitudes H_N = V(1,0,0). The catalog includes all the nuclear magnitudes reported after 1950 until August 1998 that appear in the International Comet Quarterly Archive of Cometary Photometric Data, the Minor Planet Center (MPC) data base, IAU Circulars, International Comet Quarterly, and a few papers devoted to some particular comets, together with our own observations. Photometric data previous to 1990 have mainly been taken from the Comet Light Curve Catalogue (CLICC) compiled by Kamél (\\cite{kamel}). We discuss the reliability of the reported nuclear magnitudes in relation to the inherent sources of errors and uncertainties, in particular the coma contamination often present even at large heliocentric distances. A large fraction of the JF comets of our sample indeed shows various degrees of activity at large heliocentric distances, which is correlated with recent downward jumps in their perihelion distances. The reliability of coma subtraction methods to compute the nuclear magnitude is also discussed. Most absolute nuclear magnitudes are found in the range 15 - 18, with no magnitudes fainter than H_N ~ 19.5. The catalog can be found at: http://www.fisica.edu.uy/ ~ gonzalo/catalog/. Table 2 and Appendix B are only available in electronic form at http://www.edpsciences.org Table 5 is also available in electronic form at the CDS via anonymous ftp to cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr (130.79.128.5) or via http://cdsweb.u-strasbg.fr/Abstract.html
VizieR Online Data Catalog: LVL global optical photometry (Cook+, 2014)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Cook, D. O.; Dale, D. A.; Johnson, B. D.; van Zee, L.; Lee, J. C.; Kennicutt, R. C.; Calzetti, D.; Staudaher, S. M.; Engelbracht, C. W.
2015-05-01
The LVL sample consists of 258 of our nearest galaxy neighbours reflecting a statistically complete, representative sample of the local Universe. The sample selection and description are detailed in Dale et al. (2009ApJ...703..517D, Cat. J/ApJ/703/517). (4 data files).
VizieR Online Data Catalog: LVL SEDs and physical properties (Cook+, 2014)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Cook, D. O.; Dale, D. A.; Johnson, B. D.; van Zee, L.; Lee, J. C.; Kennicutt, R. C.; Calzetti, D.; Staudaher, S. M.; Engelbracht, C. W.
2015-05-01
The LVL sample consists of 258 of our nearest galaxy neighbours reflecting a statistically complete, representative sample of the local Universe. The sample selection and description are detailed in Dale et al. (2009ApJ...703..517D, Cat. J/ApJ/703/517). (1 data file).
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
McNulty, Tom, Ed.
1995-01-01
This final installment of a four-part series on the National Library Service (NLS) examines recently implemented and future projects, with a focus on alternative formats for patrons with disabilities. Discusses LOCIS, the Library of Congress online public access catalog; MARVEL, the Library of Congress gopher; the NLS Web site; and computer disk…
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Meyer, Charles
2005-01-01
The purpose of the Lunar Sample Compendium will be to inform scientists, astronauts and the public about the various lunar samples that have been returned from the Moon. This Compendium will be organized rock by rock in the manor of a catalog, but will not be as comprehensive, nor as complete, as the various lunar sample catalogs that are available. Likewise, this Compendium will not duplicate the various excellent books and reviews on the subject of lunar samples (Cadogen 1981, Heiken et al. 1991, Papike et al. 1998, Warren 2003, Eugster 2003). However, it is thought that an online Compendium, such as this, will prove useful to scientists proposing to study individual lunar samples and should help provide backup information for lunar sample displays. This Compendium will allow easy access to the scientific literature by briefly summarizing the significant findings of each rock along with the documentation of where the detailed scientific data are to be found. In general, discussion and interpretation of the results is left to the formal reviews found in the scientific literature. An advantage of this Compendium will be that it can be updated, expanded and corrected as need be.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Burger, H. Robert
1983-01-01
Part 1 (SE 533 635) presented programs for use in mineralogy, petrology, and geochemistry. This part presents an annotated list of 64 additional programs, focusing on introductory geology, mapping, and statistical packages for geological analyses. A brief description, source, suggested use(s), programing language, and other information are…
... 9, 2017. American Red Cross. First Aid/CPR/AED Participant's Manual . 2nd ed. Dallas, TX: American Red ... redcross.org/images/MEDIA_CustomProductCatalog/m55540601_FA-CPR-AED-Part-Manual.pdf . Accessed September 14, 2017. Berg ...
75 FR 67615 - Appliance Labeling Rule
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2010-11-03
... current Rule indicates. List of Subjects in 16 CFR Part 305 Advertising, Energy conservation, Household..., distributor, retailer, or private labeler who advertises a covered product that is a ceiling fan in a catalog...
2016-12-05
Today's VIS image shows part of the canyon wall of Melas Chasma. Orbit Number: 65682 Latitude: -9.38343 Longitude: 289.417 Instrument: VIS Captured: 2016-10-04 02:52 http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA21181
2015-08-31
The linear depression in today's VIS image is part of Nili Fossae. Orbit Number: 60318 Latitude: 24.7944 Longitude: 80.7404 Instrument: VIS Captured: 2015-07-20 08:53 http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA19763
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Radial velocities of K-M dwarfs (Sperauskas+, 2016)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sperauskas, J.; Bartasiute, S.; Boyle, R. P.; Deveikis, V.; Raudeliunas, S.; Upgren, A. R.
2016-09-01
We analyzed nearly 3300 measurements of radial velocities for 1049 K-M dwarfs, that we obtained during the past decade with a CORAVEL-type instrument, with a primary emphasis on detecting and eliminating from kinematic calculations the spectroscopic binaries and binary candidates. We present the catalog of our observations of radial velocities for 959 stars which are not suspected of velocity variability. Of these, 776 stars are from the MCC sample and 173 stars are K-M dwarfs from the CNS4. The catalog consists of two parts: Table 2 lists the mean radial velocities, and Table 2a contains individual measurements. Our radial velocities agree with the best published standard stars to within 0.7km/s in precision. Combining these and supplementary radial-velocity data with Hipparcos/Tycho-2 astrometry (Table 4 summarizes input observational data) we calculated the space velocity components and parameters of the galactic orbits in a three-component model potential by Johnston K.V. et al. (1995ApJ...451..598J) for a total of 1088 K-M dwarfs (Table 5), that we use for kinematical analysis and for the identification of possible candidate members of nearby stellar kinematic groups. We identified 146 stars as possible candidate members of the classical moving groups and known or suspected subgroups (Table 7). We show that the distributions of space-velocity components, orbital eccentricities, and maximum distances from the Galactic plane for nearby K-M dwarfs are consistent with the presence of young, intermediate-age and old populations of the thin disk and a small fraction (3%) of stars with the thick disk kinematics. (7 data files).
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Warren, Wayne H., Jr.
1990-01-01
A list of 1186 ultraviolet-excess objects (designated KUV) was compiled as a result of a search conducted with the 105-cm Schmidt telescope of the Kiso station of the Tokyo Astronomical Observatory. This document describes the machine readable version of the KUV survey list and presents a sample listing showing the logical records as they are recorded in the machine readable catalog. The KUV data include equatorial coordinates, magnitudes, color indices, and identifications for previously cataloged objects.
The Second Swift BAT Gamma-Ray Burst Catalog
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Barthelmy, S. D.; Baumgartner, W. H.; Cummings, J. R.; Fenimore, E. E.; Gehrels, N.; Krimm, H. A.; Markwardt, C. B.; Palmer, D. M.; Parsons, A. M.; Sato, G.;
2010-01-01
We present the second Swift Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) catalog of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs), which contains 476 bursts detected by the BAT between 2004 December 19 and 2009 December 21. This catalog (hereafter the BAT2 catalog) presents burst trigger time, location, 90% error radius, duration, fluence, peak flux, time-averaged spectral parameters and time-resolved spectral parametert:; measured by the BAT. In the correlation study of various observed parameters extracted from the BAT prompt emission data, we distinguish among long-duration GRBs (L-GRBs), short-duration GRBs (S-GRBs), and short-duration GRBs with extended emission (S-GRBs with E.E.) to investigate differences in the prompt emission properties. The fraction of L-GRBs, S-GRBs and S-GRBs with E.E. in the catalog are 89%, 8% and 2% respectively. We compare the BAT prompt emission properties with the BATSE, BeppoSAX and HETE-2 GRB samples. We also correlate the observed prompt emission properties with the redshifts for the GRBs with known redshift. The BAT T90 and T50 durations peak at 70 s and 30 s, respectively. We confirm that the spectra of the BAT S-GRBs are generally harder than those of the L-GRBs. The time-averaged spectra of the BAT S GRBs with E.E. are similar to those of the L-GRBs. Whereas, the spectra of the initial short spikes of the S-GRBs with E.E. are similar to those of the S-GRBs. We show that the BAT GRB samples are significantly softer than the BATSE bright GRBs, and that the time-averaged E obs/peak of the BAT GRBs peaks at 80 keV which is significantly lower energy than those of the BATSE sample which peak at 320 keV. The time-averaged spectral properties of the BAT GRB sample are similar to those of the HETE-2 GRB samples. By time-resolved spectral analysis, we find that 10% of the BAT observed photon indices are outside the allowed region of the synchrotron shock model. The observed durations of the BAT high redshift GRBs are not systematically longer than those of the moderate red shift GRBs. Furthermore, the observed spectra of the BAT high red shift GRBs are similar to or harder than the moderate red shift GRBs. The T90 and T50 distributions measured at the 140-220 keY band in the GRB rest frame form the BAT known redshift GRBs peak at 19 sand 8 s, respectively. We also provide an update on the status of the on-orbit BAT calibrations.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: VLA-COSMOS 3 GHz Large Project (Smolcic+, 2017)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Smolcic, V.; Novak, M.; Bondi, M.; Ciliegi, P.; Mooley, K. P.; Schinnerer, E.; Zamorani, G.; Navarrete, F.; Bourke, S.; Karim, A.; Vardoulaki, E.; Leslie, S.; Delhaize, J.; Carilli, C. L.; Myers, S. T.; Baran, N.; Delvecchio, I.; Miettinen, O.; Banfield, J.; Balokovic, M.; Bertoldi, F.; Capak, P.; Frail, D. A.; Hallinan, G.; Hao, H.; Herrera Ruiz, N.; Horesh, A.; Ilbert, O.; Intema, H.; Jelic, V.; Klockner, H.-R.; Krpan, J.; Kulkarni, S. R.; McCracken, H.; Laigle, C.; Middleberg, E.; Murphy, E.; Sargent, M.; Scoville, N. Z.; Sheth, K.
2016-10-01
The catalog contains sources selected down to a 5σ(σ~2.3uJy/beam) threshold. This catalog can be used for statistical analyses, accompanied with the corrections given in the data & catalog release paper. All completeness & bias corrections and source counts presented in the paper were calculated using this sample. The total fraction of spurious sources in the COSMOS 2 sq.deg. is below 2.7% within this catalog. However, an increase of spurious sources up to 24% at 5.0=5.5 for single component sources (MULTI=0). The total fraction of spurious sources in the COSMOS 2 sq.deg. within such a selected sample is below 0.4%, and the fraction of spurious sources is below 3% even at the lowest S/N (=5.5). Catalog Notes: 1. Maximum ID is 10966 although there are 10830 sources. Some IDs were removed by joining them into multi-component sources. 2. Peak surface brightness of sources [uJy/beam] is not reported, but can be obtained by multiplying SNR with RMS. 3. High NPIX usually indicates extended or very bright sources. 4. Reported positional errors on resolved and extended sources should be considered lower limits. 5. Multicomponent sources have errors and S/N column values set to -99.0 Additional data information: Catalog date: 21-Mar-2016 Source extractor: BLOBCAT v1.2 (http://blobcat.sourceforge.net/) Observations: 384 hours, VLA, S-band (2-4GHz), A+C array, 192 pointings Imaging software: CASA v4.2.2 (https://casa.nrao.edu/) Imaging algorithm: Multiscale multifrequency synthesis on single pointings Mosaic size: 30000x30000 pixels (3.3 GB) Pixel size: 0.2x0.2 arcsec2 Median rms noise in the COSMOS 2 sq.deg.: 2.3uJy/beam Beam is circular with FWHM=0.75 arcsec Bandwidth-smearing peak correction: 0% (no corrections applied) Resolved criteria: Sint/Speak>1+6*snr^(-1.44) Total area covered: 2.6 sq.deg. (1 data file).
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
..., menu, wine card, leaflet, circular, mailer, book insert, catalog, promotional material, sales pamphlet... labeling under §§ 7.20 through 7.29 of this part. (b) Any editorial or other reading material (i.e., news...
2006-11-16
This image shows part of the Meridiani region of Mars, home of the Opportunity Rover. Image information: VIS instrument. Latitude 1.9N, Longitude 358.4E. 36 meter/pixel resolution. http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA01790
2015-09-02
The intersecting linear depressions in this VIS image are part of Hephaestus Fossae. Orbit Number: 60373 Latitude: 21.9161 Longitude: 122.075 Instrument: VIS Captured: 2015-07-24 20:50 http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA19765
Stellar Populations with the LSST
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Saha, Abhijit; Olsen, K.; LSST Stellar Populations Collaboration
2006-12-01
The LSST will produce a multi-color map and photometric object catalog of half the sky to g 27.5(5σ). Strategically cadenced time-space sampling of each field spanning ten years will allow variability, proper motion and parallax measurements for objects brighter than g 25. As part of providing an unprecedented map of the Galaxy, the accurate multi-band photometry will permit photometric parallaxes, chemical abundances and a handle on ages via colors at turn-off for main-sequence stars at all distances within the Galaxy, permitting a comprehensive study of star formation histories (SFH) and chemical evolution for field stars. With a geometric parallax accuracy of 1mas, LSST will produce a robust complete sample of the solar neighborhood stars. While delivering parallax accuracy comparable to HIPPARCOS, LSST will extend the catalog to more than a 10 magnitudes fainter limit, and will be complete to MV 15. In the Magellanic Clouds too, the photometry will reach MV +8, allowing the SFH and chemical signatures in the expansive outer extremities to be gleaned from their main sequence stars. This in turn will trace the detailed interaction of the Clouds with the Galaxy halo. The LSST time sampling will identify and characterize variable stars of all types, from time scales of 1hr to several years, a feast for variable star astrophysics. Cepheids and LPVs in all galaxies in the Sculptor, M83 and Cen-A groups are obvious data products: comparative studies will reveal systematic differences with galaxy properties, and help to fine tune the rungs of the distance ladder. Dwarf galaxies within 10Mpc that are too faint to find from surface brightness enhancements will be revealed via over-densities of their red giants: this systematic census will extend the luminosity function of galaxies to the faint limit. Novae discovered by LSST time sampling will trace intergalactic stars out to the Virgo and Fornax clusters.
Cross-correlating the γ-ray Sky with Catalogs of Galaxy Clusters
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Branchini, Enzo; Camera, Stefano; Cuoco, Alessandro; Fornengo, Nicolao; Regis, Marco; Viel, Matteo; Xia, Jun-Qing
2017-01-01
We report the detection of a cross-correlation signal between Fermi Large Area Telescope diffuse γ-ray maps and catalogs of clusters. In our analysis, we considered three different catalogs: WHL12, redMaPPer, and PlanckSZ. They all show a positive correlation with different amplitudes, related to the average mass of the objects in each catalog, which also sets the catalog bias. The signal detection is confirmed by the results of a stacking analysis. The cross-correlation signal extends to rather large angular scales, around 1°, that correspond, at the typical redshift of the clusters in these catalogs, to a few to tens of megaparsecs, I.e., the typical scale-length of the large-scale structures in the universe. Most likely this signal is contributed by the cumulative emission from active galactic nuclei (AGNs) associated with the filamentary structures that converge toward the high peaks of the matter density field in which galaxy clusters reside. In addition, our analysis reveals the presence of a second component, more compact in size and compatible with a point-like emission from within individual clusters. At present, we cannot distinguish between the two most likely interpretations for such a signal, I.e., whether it is produced by AGNs inside clusters or if it is a diffuse γ-ray emission from the intracluster medium. We argue that this latter, intriguing, hypothesis might be tested by applying this technique to a low-redshift large-mass cluster sample.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: GALEX BCG galaxies sample properties (Boissier+, 2018)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Boissier, S.; Cucciati, O.; Boselli, A.; Mei, S.; Ferrarese, L.
2018-01-01
Tables 2 to 5 from the paper, providing the properties of a sample of 166 BCG galaxies with UV photometry from GALEX. In table 3 -9.999999 indicates galaxies for which no values is provided. (4 data files).
VizieR Online Data Catalog: SLoWPoKES-II catalog (Dhital+, 2015)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Dhital, S.; West, A. A.; Stassun, K. G.; Schluns, K. J.; Massey, A. P.
2015-11-01
We have identified the Sloan Low-mass Wide Pairs of Kinematically Equivalent Systems (SLoWPoKES)-II catalog of 105537 wide, low-mass binaries without using proper motions. We extend the SLoWPoKES catalog (Paper I; Dhital et al. 2010, cat. J/AJ/139/2566) by identifying binary systems with angular separations of 1-20'' based entirely on SDSS photometry and astrometry. As in Paper I, we used the Catalog Archive Server query tool (CasJobs6; http://skyserver.sdss3.org/CasJobs/) to select the sample of low-mass stars from the SDSS-DR8 star table as having r-i>=0.3 and i-z>=0.2, consistent with spectral types of K5 or later. Following Paper I (Dhital et al. 2010, cat. J/AJ/139/2566) we classified candidate pairs with a probability of chance alignment Pf{<=}0.05 as real binaries. We note that this limit does not have any physical motivation but was chosen to minimize the number of spurious pairs. This cut results in 105537 M dwarf (dM)+MS (see Table3), 78 white dwarf (WD)+dM (see Table5), and 184 sdM+sdM (see Table6) binary systems with separations of 1-20''. Of the dM+MS binaries, 44 are very low-mass (VLM) binary candidates (see Table4), with colors redder than the median M7 dwarf for both components. This represents a significant increase over the SLoWPoKES catalog of 1342 common proper motion (CPM) binaries that we presented in Paper I (Dhital et al. 2010, cat. J/AJ/139/2566). The SLoWPoKES and SLoWPoKES-II catalogs are available on the Filtergraph portal (http://slowpokes.vanderbilt.edu/). (4 data files).
The third catalog of active galactic nuclei detected by the Fermi large area telescope
Ackermann, M.; Ajello, M.; Atwood, W. B.; ...
2015-08-25
We present the third catalog of active galactic nuclei (AGNs) detected by the Fermi-LAT (3LAC). It is based on the third Fermi-LAT catalog (3FGL) of sources detected between 100 MeV and 300 GeV with a Test Statistic greater than 25, between 2008 August 4 and 2012 July 31. The 3LAC includes 1591 AGNs located at high Galactic latitudes (more » $$| b| \\gt 10^\\circ $$), a 71% increase over the second catalog based on 2 years of data. There are 28 duplicate associations, thus 1563 of the 2192 high-latitude gamma-ray sources of the 3FGL catalog are AGNs. Most of them (98%) are blazars. About half of the newly detected blazars are of unknown type, i.e., they lack spectroscopic information of sufficient quality to determine the strength of their emission lines. Based on their gamma-ray spectral properties, these sources are evenly split between flat-spectrum radio quasars (FSRQs) and BL Lacs. The most abundant detected BL Lacs are of the high-synchrotron-peaked (HSP) type. There were about 50% of the BL Lacs that had no measured redshifts. A few new rare outliers (HSP-FSRQs and high-luminosity HSP BL Lacs) are reported. The general properties of the 3LAC sample confirm previous findings from earlier catalogs. The fraction of 3LAC blazars in the total population of blazars listed in BZCAT remains non-negligible even at the faint ends of the BZCAT-blazar radio, optical, and X-ray flux distributions, which hints that even the faintest known blazars could eventually shine in gamma-rays at LAT-detection levels. Furthermore, the energy-flux distributions of the different blazar populations are in good agreement with extrapolation from earlier catalogs.« less
A Catalog of Transit Timing Posterior Distributions for all Kepler Planet Candidate Events
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Montet, Benjamin Tyler; Becker, Juliette C.; Johnson, John
2015-08-01
Kepler has ushered in a new era of planetary dynamics, enabling the detection of interactions between multiple planets in transiting systems for hundreds of systems. These interactions, observed as transit timing variations (TTVs), have been used to find non-transiting companions to transiting systems and to measure masses, eccentricities, and inclinations of transiting planets. Often, physical parameters are inferred by comparing the observed light curve to the result of a photodynamical model, a time-intensive process that often ignores the effects of correlated noise in the light curve. Catalogs of transit timing observations have previously neglected non-Gaussian uncertainties in the times of transit, uncertainties in the transit shape, and short cadence data. Here, we present a catalog of not only times of transit centers, but also posterior distributions on the time of transit for every planet candidate transit event in the Kepler data, developed through importance sampling of each transit. This catalog allows us to marginalize over uncertainties in the transit shape and incorporate short cadence data, the effects of correlated noise, and non-Gaussian posteriors. Our catalog will enable dynamical studies that reflect accurately the precision of Kepler and its limitations without requiring the computational power to model the light curve completely with every integration.
The Tully-Fisher relation for flat galaxies
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Makarov, D. I.; Zaitseva, N. A.; Bizyaev, D. V.
2018-06-01
We construct a multiparametric Tully-Fisher (TF) relation for a large sample of edge-on galaxies from the Revised Flat Galaxy Catalog using H I data from the EDD database and parameters from the EGIS catalog. We incorporate a variety of additional parameters including structural parameters of edge-on galaxies in different bandpasses. Besides the rotation curve maximum, only the H I-to-optical luminosity ratio and optical colours play a statistically significant role in the multiparametric TF relation. We are able to decrease the standard deviation of the multiparametric TF relation down to 0.32 mag, which is at the level of best modern samples of galaxies used for studies of the matter motion in the Universe via the TF-relation.
Possible systematics in the VLBI catalogs as seen from Gaia
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Liu, N.; Zhu, Z.; Liu, J.-C.
2018-01-01
Aims: In order to investigate the systematic errors in the very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) positions of extragalactic sources (quasars) and the global differences between Gaia and VLBI catalogs, we use the first data release of Gaia (Gaia DR1) quasar positions as the reference and study the positional offsets of the second realization of the International Celestial Reference Frame (ICRF2) and the Goddard VLBI solution 2016a (gsf2016a) catalogs. Methods: We select a sample of 1032 common sources among three catalogs and adopt two methods to represent the systematics: considering the differential orientation (offset) and declination bias; analyzing with the vector spherical harmonics (VSH) functions. Results: Between two VLBI catalogs and Gaia DR1, we find that: i) the estimated orientation is consistent with the alignment accuracy of Gaia DR1 to ICRF, of 0.1 mas, but the southern and northern hemispheres show opposite orientations; ii) the declination bias in the southern hemisphere between Gaia DR1 and ICRF2 is estimated to be +152 μas, much larger than that between Gaia DR1 and gsf2016a which is +34 μas. Between two VLBI catalogs, we find that: i) the rotation component shows that ICRF2 and gsf2016a are generally consistent within 30 μas; ii) the glide component and quadrupole component report two declination-dependent offsets: dipolar deformation of +50 μas along the Z-axis, and quadrupolar deformation of -50 μas that would induce a pattern of sin2δ. Conclusions: The significant declination bias between Gaia DR1 and ICRF2 catalogs reported in previous studies is possibly attributed to the systematic errors of ICRF2 in the southern hemisphere. The global differences between ICRF2 and gsf2016a catalogs imply that possible, mainly declination-dependent systematics exit in the VLBI positions and need further investigations in the future Gaia data release and the next generation of ICRF.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Muzzin, Adam; Marchesini, Danilo; Stefanon, Mauro; Franx, Marijn; Milvang-Jensen, Bo; Dunlop, James S.; Fynbo, J. P. U.; Brammer, Gabriel; Labbé, Ivo; van Dokkum, Pieter
2013-05-01
We present a catalog covering 1.62 deg2 of the COSMOS/UltraVISTA field with point-spread function (PSF) matched photometry in 30 photometric bands. The catalog covers the wavelength range 0.15-24 μm including the available GALEX, Subaru, Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope, VISTA, and Spitzer data. Catalog sources have been selected from the DR1 UltraVISTA Ks band imaging that reaches a depth of K s, tot = 23.4 AB (90% completeness). The PSF-matched catalog is generated using position-dependent PSFs ensuring accurate colors across the entire field. Also included is a catalog of photometric redshifts (z phot) for all galaxies computed with the EAZY code. Comparison with spectroscopy from the zCOSMOS 10k bright sample shows that up to z ~ 1.5 the z phot are accurate to Δz/(1 + z) = 0.013, with a catastrophic outlier fraction of only 1.6%. The z phot also show good agreement with the z phot from the NEWFIRM Medium Band Survey out to z ~ 3. A catalog of stellar masses and stellar population parameters for galaxies determined using the FAST spectral energy distribution fitting code is provided for all galaxies. Also included are rest-frame U - V and V - J colors, L 2800 and L IR. The UVJ color-color diagram confirms that the galaxy bi-modality is well-established out to z ~ 2. Star-forming galaxies also obey a star-forming "main sequence" out to z ~ 2.5, and this sequence evolves in a manner consistent with previous measurements. The COSMOS/UltraVISTA Ks -selected catalog covers a unique parameter space in both depth, area, and multi-wavelength coverage and promises to be a useful tool for studying the growth of the galaxy population out to z ~ 3-4. .
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Muzzin, Adam; Franx, Marijn; Labbe, Ivo
2013-05-01
We present a catalog covering 1.62 deg{sup 2} of the COSMOS/UltraVISTA field with point-spread function (PSF) matched photometry in 30 photometric bands. The catalog covers the wavelength range 0.15-24 {mu}m including the available GALEX, Subaru, Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope, VISTA, and Spitzer data. Catalog sources have been selected from the DR1 UltraVISTA K{sub s} band imaging that reaches a depth of K {sub s,tot} = 23.4 AB (90% completeness). The PSF-matched catalog is generated using position-dependent PSFs ensuring accurate colors across the entire field. Also included is a catalog of photometric redshifts (z {sub phot}) for all galaxies computed with the EAZYmore » code. Comparison with spectroscopy from the zCOSMOS 10k bright sample shows that up to z {approx} 1.5 the z {sub phot} are accurate to {Delta}z/(1 + z) = 0.013, with a catastrophic outlier fraction of only 1.6%. The z {sub phot} also show good agreement with the z {sub phot} from the NEWFIRM Medium Band Survey out to z {approx} 3. A catalog of stellar masses and stellar population parameters for galaxies determined using the FAST spectral energy distribution fitting code is provided for all galaxies. Also included are rest-frame U - V and V - J colors, L {sub 2800} and L {sub IR}. The UVJ color-color diagram confirms that the galaxy bi-modality is well-established out to z {approx} 2. Star-forming galaxies also obey a star-forming 'main sequence' out to z {approx} 2.5, and this sequence evolves in a manner consistent with previous measurements. The COSMOS/UltraVISTA K{sub s} -selected catalog covers a unique parameter space in both depth, area, and multi-wavelength coverage and promises to be a useful tool for studying the growth of the galaxy population out to z {approx} 3-4.« less
VizieR Online Data Catalog: ALMA submm galaxies multi-wavelength data (Simpson+, 2017)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Simpson, J. M.; Smail, I.; Swinbank, A. M.; Ivison, R. J.; Dunlop, J. S.; Geach, J. E.; Almaini, O.; Arumugam, V.; Bremer, M. N.; Chen, C.-C.; Conselice, C.; Coppin, K. E. K.; Farrah, D.; Ibar, E.; Hartley, W. G.; Ma, C. J.; Michalowski, M. J.; Scott, D.; Spaans, M.; Thomson, A. P.; van der Werf, P. P.
2017-11-01
In previous work, we presented the source catalog, number counts, and far-infrared morphologies of the 52 SMGs that were detected in 30 ALMA maps (see Simpson+ 2015ApJ...799...81S, 2015ApJ...807..128S). The UKIDSS observations of the ~0.8deg2 UDS comprise four Wide-Field Camera (WFCAM) pointings in the J-, H-, and K-bands. In this paper, we use the images and catalogs released as part of the UKIDSS data release 8 (DR8). The DR8 release contains data taken between 2005 and 2010, and the final J-, H-, and K-band mosaics have a median 5σ depth (2" apertures) of J=24.9, H=24.2, and K=24.6, respectively. Deep observations of the UDS have also been taken in the U-band with Megacam at the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope (CFHT) and in the B, V, R, i', and z' bands with Suprime-cam at the Subaru telescope. Furthermore, deep Spitzer data, obtained as part of the SpUDS program (PI: J. Dunlop) provides imaging reaching a 5σ depth of m3.6=24.2 and m4.5=24.0 at 3.6um and 4.5um, respectively. The UDS field was observed at 250, 350, and 500um with the Spectral and Photometric Imaging Receiver (SPIRE) onboard the Herschel Space Observatory as part of the Herschel Multi-tiered Extragalactic Survey (HerMES). The UDS field was observed by the VLA at 1.4GHz as part of the project UDS20 (V. Arumugam et al. 2017, in preparation). A total of 14 pointings were used to mosaic an area of ~1.3deg2 centered on the UDS field. (2 data files).
VizieR Online Data Catalog: VISTA Magellanic Survey (VMC) catalog (Cioni+, 2011)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Cioni, M.-R. L.; Clementini, G.; Girardi, L.; Guandalini, R.; Gullieuszik, M.; Miszalski, B.; Moretti, M.-I.; Ripepi, V.; Rubele, S.; Bagheri, G.; Bekki, K.; Cross, N.; de Blok, W. J. G.; de Grijs, R.; Emerson, J. P.; Evans, C. J.; Gibson, B.; Gonzales-Solares, E.; Groenewegen, M. A. T.; Irwin, M.; Ivanov, V. D.; Lewis, J.; Marconi, M.; Marquette, J.-B.; Mastropietro, C.; Moore, B.; Napiwotzki, R.; Naylor, T.; Oliveira, J. M.; Read, M.; Sutorius, E.; van Loon, J. Th.; Wilkinson, M. I.; Wood, P. R.
2017-11-01
The VISTA survey of the Magellanic Clouds system (VMC) survey is a homogeneous and uniform YJKs survey of ~184deg2 across the Magellanic system. Observations were obtained with the VISTA telescope as part of the VISTA survey of the Magellanic Cloud system (VMC; ESO program 179.B-2003). This data release is based on the observa tions of twelve new VMC survey tiles LMC 35, 42, 43, 73, 93, SMC 43, 52, 54, BRI 28, 35, and STR 11, 21. Observations were acquired between November 2009 and August 2013. (1 data file).
The Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment. Eclipsing Binary Stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wyrzykowski, L.; Udalski, A.; Kubiak, M.; Szymanski, M.; Zebrun, K.; Soszynski, I.; Wozniak, P. R.; Pietrzynski, G.; Szewczyk, O.
2003-03-01
We present the catalog of 2580 eclipsing binary stars detected in 4.6 square degree area of the central parts of the Large Magellanic Cloud. The photometric data were collected during the second phase of the OGLE microlensing search from 1997 to 2000. The eclipsing objects were selected with the automatic search algorithm based on an artificial neural network. Basic statistics of eclipsing stars are presented. Also, the list of 36 candidates of detached eclipsing binaries for spectroscopic study and for precise LMC distance determination is provided. The full catalog is accessible from the OGLE Internet archive.
The Gaia hybrid catalog: a leverage to find Galactic structures
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Fouesneau, M.; Bailer-Jones, C. A. L.
2014-07-01
The ongoing Gaia mission will undertake an astrometric, photometric and spectroscopic survey of the Galaxy. The Gaia consortium will use Gaia-only data to classify objects and to estimate their individual astrophysical parameters. However, one can achieve more reliable estimates of stellar parameters by combining Gaia data with data from other spectroscopic and photometric surveys. The Gaia "hybrid catalog" project will provide an exquisite value-added catalogs of astrophysical parameters for Gaia targets by taking into account the "obvious" non-Gaia data (e.g., SDSS, WISE, Pan-STARRS, APOGEE, PPMXL, SDSS, 2MASS, Tycho). By including spectroscopic indicators of metallicity when available, or infrared photometry, we can reduce the degeneracies between extinction and temperature and improve the estimation of metallicity and surface gravity. However, the creation of such catalogs comes with significant challenges. First the cross-matching of catalogs with various selection functions, or photometric depths. Second, we must optimize the data analysis to produce the most accurate information given a specific science goal. Finally, the construction of such catalogs will require significant computation power. The current plan is to do this using the local resources at the Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, and then each catalog will go through validation and integration processes to finally be released as part of the value-added Gaia data products. From these challenges, it is clear that hybrid catalogs will not be a copy of the Gaia catalog but must be adapted to support very specific science questions. In the poster we presented, we details in particular two applications of the Gaia hybrid catalogs. First, we considered the addition of WISE data to the Gaia information. The WISE data enable us to constrain not only the amount of extinction through the addition of infrared data, but also allow us to better classify certain spectral types. For instance, from the addition of the WISE filters, one can select the Oxygen-rich Asymptotic Giant Branch (AGBs) stars to find spatial substructures with particular interstellar medium properties. Breaking through the distance-extinction degeneracies will also help finding large scale structures in the disk such as streams or spiral arms, especially when combined with age or metallicity selections for instance. Second, we presented one aspect of the hybrid catalogs dedicated to support the analysis of star clusters. Star clusters are not only calibrators of stellar evolution models but also references to study star formation in general. We presented one future outcome of the hybrid catalogs, in which we provide for known star clusters, an assessment of stellar memberships based on a combination of phase-space, and colormagnitude distribution fitting. In this application, the assumption that a cluster is a "simple" population provides a significant advantage when deriving individual star properties. Eventually one can imagine this application can be extended to stellar streams. Hybrid catalogs are meant to be provided along with the Gaia data releases, and will offer a tremendous source of validation for the Gaia Data Processing.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Rodrigues, M.; Foster, C.; Taylor, E. N.; Wright, A. H.; Hopkins, A. M.; Baldry, I.; Brough, S.; Bland-Hawthorn, J.; Cluver, M. E.; Lara-López, M. A.; Liske, J.; López-Sánchez, Á. R.; Pimbblet, K. A.
2016-05-01
This paper presents a new catalog of emission lines based on the GAMA II data for galaxies between 0.07
VizieR Online Data Catalog: AMIGA sample: CO properties (Lisenfeld+, 2017)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lisenfeld, U.; Alatalo, K.; Zucker, C.; Appleton, P. N.; Gallagher, S.; Guillard, P.; Johnson, K.
2017-09-01
Our sample is based on the catalog of Zucker et al. (2016, Cat. J/ApJ/821/113), which presents WISE data for 652 galaxies in 163 compact groups, of which 428 galaxies have reliable photometry (S/N> 2 in all bands). We searched the literature for all existing CO data for this Zucker et al. (2016, Cat. J/ApJ/821/113) subsample (294 galaxies) and obtained CO measurements for 102 HCG galaxies (Verdes-Montenegro et al., 1998ApJ...497...89V; Leon et al., 1998A&A...330...37L; Martinez-Badenes et al., 2012, Cat. J/A+A/540/A96; Lisenfeld et al., 2014, Cat. J/A+A/570/A24) and for two RSCG galaxies (Mirabel et al., 1990A&A...236..327M; Wiklind et al., 1995A&A...297..643W, NGC 232 and NGC 2831). The observations were carried out with the Institut de Radioastronomie Millimetrique (IRAM) 30m telescope, Five College Radio Telescope, Swedish-ESO Submillimetre Telescope (SEST), and Kitt Peak Radio Telescope with single pointings at the central position for most cases. To supplement the CO data for these 104 galaxies from the literature, as part of this study we observed the redshifted CO(1-0) line for an additional 27 galaxies. We observed an additional 27 galaxies in CGs between January and April 2017 with the IRAM 30m telescope on Pico Veleta. We selected the sources, based on their WISE colors, as preferentially canyon or IRTZ objects. (1 data file).
Catalog of Apollo 17 rocks. Volume 1: Stations 2 and 3 (South Massif)
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Ryder, Graham
1993-01-01
The Catalog of Apollo 17 Rocks is a set of volumes that characterize each of 334 individually numbered rock samples (79 larger than 100 g) in the Apollo 17 collection, showing what each sample is and what is known about it. Unconsolidated regolith samples are not included. The catalog is intended to be used by both researchers requiring sample allocations and a broad audience interested in Apollo 17 rocks. The volumes are arranged geographically, with separate volumes for the South Massif and Light Mantle, the North Massif, and two volumes for the mare plains. Within each volume, the samples are arranged in numerical order, closely corresponding with the sample collection stations. The present volume, for the South Massif and Light Mantle, describes the 55 individual rock fragments collected at Stations two, two-A, three, and LRV-five. Some were chipped from boulders, others collected as individual rocks, some by raking, and a few by picking from the soil in the processing laboratory. Information on sample collection, petrography, chemistry, stable and radiogenic isotopes, rock surface characteristics, physical properties, and curatorial processing is summarized and referenced as far as it is known up to early 1992. The intention has been to be comprehensive: to include all published studies of any kind that provide information on the sample, as well as some unpublished information. References which are primarily bulk interpretations of existing data or mere lists of samples are not generally included. Foreign language journals were not scrutinized, but little data appears to have been published only in such journals. We have attempted to be consistent in format across all of the volumes, and have used a common reference list that appears in all volumes. Where possible, ages based on Sr and Ar isotopes have been recalculated using the 'new' decay constants recommended by Steiger and Jager; however, in many of the reproduced diagrams the ages correspond with the 'old' decay constants. In this volume, mg' or Mg' = atomic Mg/(Mg +Fe).
Sedna Planitia Right Member of a Synthetic Stereo Pair
1998-06-04
This perspective view of Venus, generated by computer from NASA Magellan data and color-coded with emissivity, shows part of the lowland plains in Sedna Planitia. http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA00314
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Constantin, Anca; Green, Paul; Haggard, Daryl
2018-01-01
For most of the nearby active galaxies, a mix of processes including emission from star-forming regions, other ionization sources (shocks, turbulence, etc.), nuclear obscuration, as well as host galaxy starlight obfuscate the true nature of their dominant ionization mechanism. X-ray emission is one of the most reliable primary signatures of accretion activity, and with the advent of the public catalogs, it became one of the most effective diagnostics as well. Working with large and significantly less biased samples that only serendipitous X-ray catalogs are able to provide, we were able to: 1) provide the most accurate estimates of the AGN fraction as a function of a diverse set of parameters; 2) confirm with X-rays a sequence from star-forming to active to passive galaxies that matches trends in both optical host galaxy characteristics and in the large scale environment; 3) discover intriguing similarities between accretion onto supermassive and stellar size black holes, with direct consequences for the physical significance of the Gamma-L/Ledd relation for AGN of both type I and II in the local universe. This presentation will summarize these exciting results, and will also report on novel extended efforts to decipher the link between the water megamaser emission and galactic nuclear activity, which are made possible only by the availability of the large sample statistics of carefully curated X-ray measurements uniquely offered by the combined Chandra and XMM catalogs.
Hough, Susan E.
2013-01-01
The occurrence of three earthquakes with moment magnitude (Mw) greater than 8.8 and six earthquakes larger than Mw 8.5, since 2004, has raised interest in the long-term global rate of great earthquakes. Past studies have focused on the analysis of earthquakes since 1900, which roughly marks the start of the instrumental era in seismology. Before this time, the catalog is less complete and magnitude estimates are more uncertain. Yet substantial information is available for earthquakes before 1900, and the catalog of historical events is being used increasingly to improve hazard assessment. Here I consider the catalog of historical earthquakes and show that approximately half of all Mw ≥ 8.5 earthquakes are likely missing or underestimated in the 19th century. I further present a reconsideration of the felt effects of the 8 February 1843, Lesser Antilles earthquake, including a first thorough assessment of felt reports from the United States, and show it is an example of a known historical earthquake that was significantly larger than initially estimated. The results suggest that incorporation of best available catalogs of historical earthquakes will likely lead to a significant underestimation of seismic hazard and/or the maximum possible magnitude in many regions, including parts of the Caribbean.
The Pan-STARRS 1 Medium Deep Field Variable Star Catalog
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Flewelling, Heather
2015-01-01
We present the first Pan-STARRS 1 Medium Deep Field Variable Star Catalog (PS1-MDF-VSC). The Pan-STARRS 1 (PS1) telescope is a 1.8 meter survey telescope with a 1.4 Gigapixel camera, located in Haleakala, Hawaii. The Medium Deep survey, which consists of 10 fields located uniformly across the sky, totalling 70 square degrees, is observed each night, in 2-3 filters per field, with 8 exposures per filter, resulting in 3000-4000 data points per star over a time span of 3.5 years. To find the variables, we select the stars with > 200 detections, between 16th and 21st magnitude. There are approximately 500k stars that fit this criteria, they then go through a lomb-scargle fitting routine to determine periodicity. After a periodicity cut, the ~400 candidates are classified by eye into different types of variable stars. We have identified several hundred variable stars, with periods ranging between a few minutes to a few days, and about half are not previously identified in the literature. We compare our results to the stripe 82 variable catalog, which overlaps part of the sky with the PS1 catalog.
The Pan-STARRS 1 Medium Deep Field Variable Star Catalog
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Flewelling, Heather
2015-08-01
We present the first Pan-STARRS 1 Medium Deep Field Variable Star Catalog (PS1-MDF-VSC). The Pan-STARRS 1 (PS1) telescope is a 1.8 meter survey telescope with a 1.4 Gigapixel camera, located in Haleakala, Hawaii. The Medium Deep survey, which consists of 10 fields located uniformly across the sky, totalling 70 square degrees, is observed each night, in 2-3 filters per field, with 8 exposures per filter, resulting in 3000-4000 data points per star over a time span of 3.5 years. To find the variables, we select the stars with > 200 detections, between 16th and 21st magnitude. There are approximately 500k stars that fit this criteria, they then go through a lomb-scargle fitting routine to determine periodicity. After a periodicity cut, the ~400 candidates are classified by eye into different types of variable stars. We have identified several hundred variable stars, with periods ranging between a few minutes to a few days, and about half are not previously identified in the literature. We compare our results to the stripe 82 variable catalog, which overlaps part of the sky with the PS1 catalog.
Modeling Requirements for Cohort and Register IT.
Stäubert, Sebastian; Weber, Ulrike; Michalik, Claudia; Dress, Jochen; Ngouongo, Sylvie; Stausberg, Jürgen; Winter, Alfred
2016-01-01
The project KoRegIT (funded by TMF e.V.) aimed to develop a generic catalog of requirements for research networks like cohort studies and registers (KoReg). The catalog supports such kind of research networks to build up and to manage their organizational and IT infrastructure. To make transparent the complex relationships between requirements, which are described in use cases from a given text catalog. By analyzing and modeling the requirements a better understanding and optimizations of the catalog are intended. There are two subgoals: a) to investigate one cohort study and two registers and to model the current state of their IT infrastructure; b) to analyze the current state models and to find simplifications within the generic catalog. Processing the generic catalog was performed by means of text extraction, conceptualization and concept mapping. Then methods of enterprise architecture planning (EAP) are used to model the extracted information. To work on objective a) questionnaires are developed by utilizing the model. They are used for semi-structured interviews, whose results are evaluated via qualitative content analysis. Afterwards the current state was modeled. Objective b) was done by model analysis. A given generic text catalog of requirements was transferred into a model. As result of objective a) current state models of one existing cohort study and two registers are created and analyzed. An optimized model called KoReg-reference-model is the result of objective b). It is possible to use methods of EAP to model requirements. This enables a better overview of the partly connected requirements by means of visualization. The model based approach also enables the analysis and comparison of the empirical data from the current state models. Information managers could reduce the effort of planning the IT infrastructure utilizing the KoReg-reference-model. Modeling the current state and the generation of reports from the model, which could be used as requirements specification for bids, is supported, too.
Digitizing Villanova University's Eclipsing Binary Card Catalogue
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Guzman, Giannina; Dalton, Briana; Conroy, Kyle; Prsa, Andrej
2018-01-01
Villanova University’s Department of Astrophysics and Planetary Science has years of hand-written archival data on Eclipsing Binaries at its disposal. This card catalog began at Princeton in the 1930’s with notable contributions from scientists such as Henry Norris Russel. During World War II, the archive was moved to the University of Pennsylvania, which was one of the world centers for Eclipsing Binary research, consequently, the contributions to the catalog during this time were immense. It was then moved to University of Florida at Gainesville before being accepted by Villanova in the 1990’s. The catalog has been kept in storage since then. The objective of this project is to digitize this archive and create a fully functional online catalog that contains the information available on the cards, along with the scan of the actual cards. Our group has built a database using a python-powered infrastructure to contain the collected data. The team also built a prototype web-based searchable interface as a front-end to the catalog. Following the data-entry process, information like the Right Ascension and Declination will be run against SIMBAD and any differences between values will be noted as part of the catalog. Information published online from the card catalog and even discrepancies in information for a star, could be a catalyst for new studies on these Eclipsing Binaries. Once completed, the database-driven interface will be made available to astronomers worldwide. The group will also acquire, from the database, a list of referenced articles that have yet to be found online in order to further pursue their digitization. This list will be comprised of references in the cards that were neither found on ADS nor online during the data-entry process. Pursuing the integration of these references to online queries such as ADS will be an ongoing process that will contribute and further facilitate studies on Eclipsing Binaries.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ouillon, G.; Ducorbier, C.; Sornette, D.
2008-01-01
We propose a new pattern recognition method that is able to reconstruct the three-dimensional structure of the active part of a fault network using the spatial location of earthquakes. The method is a generalization of the so-called dynamic clustering (or k means) method, that partitions a set of data points into clusters, using a global minimization criterion of the variance of the hypocenters locations about their center of mass. The new method improves on the original k means method by taking into account the full spatial covariance tensor of each cluster in order to partition the data set into fault-like, anisotropic clusters. Given a catalog of seismic events, the output is the optimal set of plane segments that fits the spatial structure of the data. Each plane segment is fully characterized by its location, size, and orientation. The main tunable parameter is the accuracy of the earthquake locations, which fixes the resolution, i.e., the residual variance of the fit. The resolution determines the number of fault segments needed to describe the earthquake catalog: the better the resolution, the finer the structure of the reconstructed fault segments. The algorithm successfully reconstructs the fault segments of synthetic earthquake catalogs. Applied to the real catalog constituted of a subset of the aftershock sequence of the 28 June 1992 Landers earthquake in southern California, the reconstructed plane segments fully agree with faults already known on geological maps or with blind faults that appear quite obvious in longer-term catalogs. Future improvements of the method are discussed, as well as its potential use in the multiscale study of the inner structure of fault zones.
Seismicity and geodynamics in the central part of the Vanuatu Arc
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Baillard, C.; Crawford, W. C.; Ballu, V.; Regnier, M. M.; Pelletier, B.; Garaebiti, E.
2013-12-01
The Vanuatu Arc (VA) in the southwest Pacific ocean (167°E, 13-20°S), is highly seismically active, with more than 35 events of magnitude Mw ≥ 7 since 1973 (USGS catalog). The geodynamics are dominated by the east-dipping subduction of the Australian Plate under the North Fiji Basin microplate. Convergence rates are estimated to be between 130 and 170 mm/yr, except in the central part of the VA where convergence slows to 30-40 mm/yr. This slowing appears to be the result of blockage by the subducting d'Entrecastaux ridge. To quantify the tectonics of this blocked section, we deployed 30 seismometers in 2008-2009 and 8 GPS stations since 2008, in the forearc region of the central VA. The seismometers recorded more than 100 events/day. Detailed analysis of the earthquake catalog reveals: 1) a seismic gap between 40 and 60 km deep under the two largest islands of the VA (Santo and Malekula); 2) subduction plane and intraplate faulting within the down-going plate; and 3) reduced activity beneath Malekula island , perhaps indicating a locked patch on the subduction plane. We infer the geometry of the subduction interface by combining our catalog with unpublished data from the 2000 Santo Mw 6.9 earthquake and aftershocks and the USGS and Global CMT catalogs. The subduction interface appears to be composed of two different panels: a shallow one with a small dip angle and a deeper one with higher dip starting at a depth of ~50 km. We compare finite-element modeling of these panels to the geodetic data to test the connectedness of the two panels and their degree of locking.
Earth - Ross Ice Shelf, Antarctica
1996-02-09
This color picture of Antarctica is one part of a mosaic of pictures covering the entire Antarctic continent taken during the hours following NASA's Galileo historic first encounter with its home planet. http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA00117
Sojourner Sits Near "Rock Garden"
2003-02-01
The Mars Pathfinder Rover Sojourner images by the Imager for Mars Pathfinder as it nears the rock "Wedge." Part of the Rock Garden is visible in the upper right of the image. http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA04318
1996-01-29
This false-color mosaic of part of the Moon was constructed from 54 images taken by the imaging system aboard NASA's Galileo as the spacecraft flew past the Moon on December 7, 1992. http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA00129
2017-03-27
Today's VIS image shows part of the large dune form on the floor of Russell Crater. Orbit Number: 67151 Latitude: -54.3002 Longitude: 13.0603 Instrument: VIS Captured: 2017-02-02 03:15 http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA21517
Full stellar kinematical profiles of central parts of nearby galaxies
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Vudragović, A.; Samurović, S.; Jovanović, M.
2016-09-01
Context. We present the largest catalog of detailed stellar kinematics of the central parts of nearby galaxies, which includes higher moments of the line-of-sight velocity distribution (LOSVD) function represented by the Gauss-Hermite series. The kinematics is measured on a sample of galaxies selected from the Arecibo Legacy Fast ALFA (Alfalfa) survey using spectroscopy from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS DR7). Aims: The SDSS DR7 offers measurements of the LOSVD based on the assumption of a pure Gaussian shape of the broadening function caused by the combination of rotational and random motion of the stars in galaxies. We discuss the consequences of this oversimplification since the velocity dispersion, one of the measured quantities, often serves as the proxy to important modeling parameters such as the black-hole mass and the virial mass of galaxies. Methods: The publicly available pPXF code is used to calculate the full kinematical profile for the sample galaxies including higher moments of their LOSVD. Both observed and synthetic stellar libraries were used and the related template mismatch problem is discussed. Results: For the whole sample of 2180 nearby galaxies reflecting morphological distribution characteristic for the local Universe, we successfully recovered stellar kinematics of their central parts, including higher order moments of the LOSVD function, for signal-to-noise above 50. Conclusions: We show the consequences of the oversimplification of the LOSVD function with Gaussian function on the velocity dispersion for the empirical and the synthetic stellar library. For the empirical stellar library, this approximation leads to an increase in the virial mass of 13% on average, while for the synthetic library the effect is weaker, with an increase of 9% on average. Systematic erroneous estimates of the velocity dispersion comes from the use of the synthetic stellar library instead of the empirical one and is much larger than the value imposed by the use of the Gaussian function. Only after a careful analysis of the template mismatch problem does one need to address the issue of the deviation of the LOSVD from the Gaussian function. We also show that the kurtotic parameter describing symmetrical departures from the Gaussian seems to increase along the continuous morphological sequence from late- to early-type galaxies. The catalog is only available at the CDS via anonymous ftp to http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr (http://130.79.128.5) or via http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr/viz-bin/qcat?J/A+A/593/A40
A Complete Public Archive for the Einstein Imaging Proportional Counter
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Helfand, David J.
1996-01-01
Consistent with our proposal to the Astrophysics Data Program in 1992, we have completed the design, construction, documentation, and distribution of a flexible and complete archive of the data collected by the Einstein Imaging Proportional Counter. Along with software and data delivered to the High Energy Astrophysics Science Archive Research Center at Goddard Space Flight Center, we have compiled and, where appropriate, published catalogs of point sources, soft sources, hard sources, extended sources, and transient flares detected in the database along with extensive analyses of the instrument's backgrounds and other anomalies. We include in this document a brief summary of the archive's functionality, a description of the scientific catalogs and other results, a bibliography of publications supported in whole or in part under this contract, and a list of personnel whose pre- and post-doctoral education consisted in part in participation in this project.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: FIR data of IR-bright dust-obscured galaxies (DOGs) (Toba+, 2017)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Toba, Y.; Nagao, T.; Wang, W.-H.; Matsuhara, H.; Akiyama, M.; Goto, T.; Koyama, Y.; Ohyama, Y.; Yamamura, I.
2017-11-01
We investigate the star-forming activity of a sample of infrared (IR)-bright dust-obscured galaxies (DOGs) that show an extreme red color in the optical and IR regime, (i-[22])AB>7.0. Combining an IR-bright DOG sample with the flux at 22μm>3.8mJy discovered by Toba & Nagao (2016ApJ...820...46T) with the IRAS faint source catalog version 2 and AKARI far-IR (FIR) all-sky survey bright source catalog version 2, we selected 109 DOGs with FIR data. For a subsample of seven IR-bright DOGs with spectroscopic redshifts (0.07
VizieR Online Data Catalog: New spectral lag measurements of 50 Fermi/GBM GRBs (Shao+, 2017)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Shao, L.; Zhang, B.-B.; Wang, F.-R.; Wu, X.-F.; Cheng, Y.-H.; Zhang, Xi; Yu, B.-Y.; Xi, B.-J.; Wang, X.; Feng, H.-X.; Zhang, M.; Xu, D.
2018-03-01
This work made extensive use of the data from the Gamma-Ray Burst Monitor (GBM) on board the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope. For the first step, we searched in the official GBM online burst catalog (Gruber+ 2014ApJS..211...12G ; von Kienlin+ 2014, J/ApJS/211/13) for bright bursts with a total fluence F>5x10-6erg/cm-2 in 10-1000keV. See section 2 for the details on the sample selection. (1 data file).
Dunlop, Rebecca A; Noad, Michael J; Cato, Douglas H; Stokes, Dale
2007-11-01
Although the songs of humpback whales have been extensively studied, other vocalizations and percussive sounds, referred to as "social sounds," have received little attention. This study presents the social vocalization repertoire of migrating east Australian humpback whales from a sample of 660 sounds recorded from 61 groups of varying composition, over three years. The social vocalization repertoire of humpback whales was much larger than previously described with a total of 34 separate call types classified aurally and by spectrographic analysis as well as statistically. Of these, 21 call types were the same as units of the song current at the time of recording but used individually instead of as part of the song sequence, while the other 13 calls were stable over the three years of the study and were not part of the song. This study provides a catalog of sounds that can be used as a basis for future studies. It is an essential first step in determining the function, contextual use and cultural transmission of humpback social vocalizations.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Cherry, Wayne R., Jr.
2017-01-01
Storytelling is a part of who people are as humans. Melvil Dewey himself saw the need to catalog folktales and stories from the oral tradition in the 390s, a section dedicated to social customs. Stories form a part of the very fabric of who people are and give insight into the past as much, if not more so, than the histories. Teachers can leverage…
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-01-01
... software and databases, at wholesale and retail. Our products are available by mail order to any member of.... Release of information by instruction in catalog courses and associated teaching laboratories of academic... proprietary business does not qualify as an “academic institution” within the meaning of § 734.9 of this part...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-01-01
... software and databases, at wholesale and retail. Our products are available by mail order to any member of.... Release of information by instruction in catalog courses and associated teaching laboratories of academic... proprietary business does not qualify as an “academic institution” within the meaning of § 734.9 of this part...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-01-01
... software and databases, at wholesale and retail. Our products are available by mail order to any member of.... Release of information by instruction in catalog courses and associated teaching laboratories of academic... proprietary business does not qualify as an “academic institution” within the meaning of § 734.9 of this part...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-01-01
... software and databases, at wholesale and retail. Our products are available by mail order to any member of.... Release of information by instruction in catalog courses and associated teaching laboratories of academic... proprietary business does not qualify as an “academic institution” within the meaning of § 734.9 of this part...
The Massive Star-forming Regions Omnibus X-ray Catalog, Second Installment
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Townsley, Leisa K.; Broos, Patrick S.; Garmire, Gordon P.; Anderson, Gemma E.; Feigelson, Eric D.; Naylor, Tim; Povich, Matthew S.
2018-04-01
We present the second installment of the Massive Star-forming Regions (MSFRs) Omnibus X-ray Catalog (MOXC2), a compilation of X-ray point sources detected in Chandra/ACIS observations of 16 Galactic MSFRs and surrounding fields. MOXC2 includes 13 ACIS mosaics, three containing a pair of unrelated MSFRs at different distances, with a total catalog of 18,396 point sources. The MSFRs sampled range over distances of 1.3 kpc to 6 kpc and populations varying from single massive protostars to the most massive Young Massive Cluster known in the Galaxy. By carefully detecting and removing X-ray point sources down to the faintest statistically significant limit, we facilitate the study of the remaining unresolved X-ray emission. Through comparison with mid-infrared images that trace photon-dominated regions and ionization fronts, we see that the unresolved X-ray emission is due primarily to hot plasmas threading these MSFRs, the result of feedback from the winds and supernovae of massive stars. The 16 MSFRs studied in MOXC2 more than double the MOXC1 sample, broadening the parameter space of ACIS MSFR explorations and expanding Chandra's substantial contribution to contemporary star formation science.
New Catalog of Resources Enables Paleogeosciences Research
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lingo, R. C.; Horlick, K. A.; Anderson, D. M.
2014-12-01
The 21st century promises a new era for scientists of all disciplines, the age where cyber infrastructure enables research and education and fuels discovery. EarthCube is a working community of over 2,500 scientists and students of many Earth Science disciplines who are looking to build bridges between disciplines. The EarthCube initiative will create a digital infrastructure that connects databases, software, and repositories. A catalog of resources (databases, software, repositories) has been produced by the Research Coordination Network for Paleogeosciences to improve the discoverability of resources. The Catalog is currently made available within the larger-scope CINERGI geosciences portal (http://hydro10.sdsc.edu/geoportal/catalog/main/home.page). Other distribution points and web services are planned, using linked data, content services for the web, and XML descriptions that can be harvested using metadata protocols. The databases provide searchable interfaces to find data sets that would otherwise remain dark data, hidden in drawers and on personal computers. The software will be described in catalog entries so just one click will lead users to methods and analytical tools that many geoscientists were unaware of. The repositories listed in the Paleogeosciences Catalog contain physical samples found all across the globe, from natural history museums to the basements of university buildings. EarthCube has over 250 databases, 300 software systems, and 200 repositories which will grow in the coming year. When completed, geoscientists across the world will be connected into a productive workflow for managing, sharing, and exploring geoscience data and information that expedites collaboration and innovation within the paleogeosciences, potentially bringing about new interdisciplinary discoveries.
The SIMPLE Survey: Observations, Reduction, and Catalog
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Damen, M.; Labbé, I.; van Dokkum, P. G.; Franx, M.; Taylor, E. N.; Brandt, W. N.; Dickinson, M.; Gawiser, E.; Illingworth, G. D.; Kriek, M.; Marchesini, D.; Muzzin, A.; Papovich, C.; Rix, H.-W.
2011-01-01
We present the Spitzer IRAC/MUSYC Public Legacy Survey in the Extended CDF-South (SIMPLE), which consists of deep IRAC observations covering the ~1600 arcmin2 area surrounding GOODS-S. The limiting magnitudes of the SIMPLE IRAC mosaics typically are 23.8, 23.6, 21.9, and 21.7, at 3.6 μm, 4.5 μm, 5.8 μm, and 8.0 μm, respectively (5σ total point source magnitudes in AB). The SIMPLE IRAC images are combined with the 10' × 15' GOODS IRAC mosaics in the center. We give detailed descriptions of the observations, data reduction, and properties of the final images, as well as the detection and photometry methods used to build a catalog. Using published optical and near-infrared data from the Multiwavelength Survey by Yale-Chile (MUSYC), we construct an IRAC-selected catalog, containing photometry in UBVRIz'JHK, [3.6 μm], [4.5 μm], [5.8 μm], and [8.0 μm]. The catalog contains 43,782 sources with S/N >5 at 3.6 μm, 19,993 of which have 13-band photometry. We compare this catalog to the publicly available MUSYC and FIREWORKS catalogs and discuss the differences. Using a high signal-to-noise sub-sample of 3391 sources with ([3.6] + [4.5])/2 < 21.2, we investigate the star formation rate history of massive galaxies out to z ~ 1.8. We find that at z ~ 1.8 at least 30% ± 7% of the most massive galaxies (M * >1011 M sun) are passively evolving, in agreement with earlier results from surveys covering less area.
CROSS-CORRELATING THE γ-RAY SKY WITH CATALOGS OF GALAXY CLUSTERS
Branchini, Enzo; Camera, Stefano; Cuoco, Alessandro; ...
2017-01-18
In this article, we report the detection of a cross-correlation signal between Fermi Large Area Telescope diffuse γ-ray maps and catalogs of clusters. In our analysis, we considered three different catalogs: WHL12, redMaPPer, and PlanckSZ. They all show a positive correlation with different amplitudes, related to the average mass of the objects in each catalog, which also sets the catalog bias. The signal detection is confirmed by the results of a stacking analysis. The cross-correlation signal extends to rather large angular scales, around 1°, that correspond, at the typical redshift of the clusters in these catalogs, to a few tomore » tens of megaparsecs, i.e., the typical scale-length of the large-scale structures in the universe. Most likely this signal is contributed by the cumulative emission from active galactic nuclei (AGNs) associated with the filamentary structures that converge toward the high peaks of the matter density field in which galaxy clusters reside. In addition, our analysis reveals the presence of a second component, more compact in size and compatible with a point-like emission from within individual clusters. At present, we cannot distinguish between the two most likely interpretations for such a signal, i.e., whether it is produced by AGNs inside clusters or if it is a diffuse γ-ray emission from the intracluster medium. Lastly, we argue that this latter, intriguing, hypothesis might be tested by applying this technique to a low-redshift large-mass cluster sample.« less
Love, Erika; Butzin, Diane; Robinson, Robert E.; Lee, Soo
1971-01-01
A project to recatalog and reclassify the book collection of the Bowman Gray School of Medicine Library utilizing the Magnetic Tape/Selectric Typwriter system for simultaneous catalog card production and computer stored data acquisition marks the beginning of eventual computerization of all library operations. A keyboard optical display system will be added by late 1970. Major input operations requiring the creation of “hard copy” will continue via the MTST system. Updating, editing and retrieval operations as well as input without hard copy production will be done through the “on-line” keyboard optical display system. Once the library's first data bank, the book catalog, has been established the computer may be consulted directly for library holdings from any optical display terminal throughout the medical center. Three basic information retrieval operations may be carried out through “on-line” optical display terminals. Output options include the reproduction of part or all of a given document, or the generation of statistical data, which are derived from two Acquisition Code lines. The creation of a central bibliographic record of Bowman Gray Faculty publications patterned after the cataloging program is presently under way. The cataloging and computer storage of serial holdings records will begin after completion of the reclassification project. All acquisitions added to the collection since October 1967 are computer-stored and fully retrievable. Reclassification of older titles will be completed in early 1971. PMID:5542915
Almeida, Mathieu; Hébert, Agnès; Abraham, Anne-Laure; Rasmussen, Simon; Monnet, Christophe; Pons, Nicolas; Delbès, Céline; Loux, Valentin; Batto, Jean-Michel; Leonard, Pierre; Kennedy, Sean; Ehrlich, Stanislas Dusko; Pop, Mihai; Montel, Marie-Christine; Irlinger, Françoise; Renault, Pierre
2014-12-13
Microbial communities of traditional cheeses are complex and insufficiently characterized. The origin, safety and functional role in cheese making of these microbial communities are still not well understood. Metagenomic analysis of these communities by high throughput shotgun sequencing is a promising approach to characterize their genomic and functional profiles. Such analyses, however, critically depend on the availability of appropriate reference genome databases against which the sequencing reads can be aligned. We built a reference genome catalog suitable for short read metagenomic analysis using a low-cost sequencing strategy. We selected 142 bacteria isolated from dairy products belonging to 137 different species and 67 genera, and succeeded to reconstruct the draft genome of 117 of them at a standard or high quality level, including isolates from the genera Kluyvera, Luteococcus and Marinilactibacillus, still missing from public database. To demonstrate the potential of this catalog, we analysed the microbial composition of the surface of two smear cheeses and one blue-veined cheese, and showed that a significant part of the microbiota of these traditional cheeses was composed of microorganisms newly sequenced in our study. Our study provides data, which combined with publicly available genome references, represents the most expansive catalog to date of cheese-associated bacteria. Using this extended dairy catalog, we revealed the presence in traditional cheese of dominant microorganisms not deliberately inoculated, mainly Gram-negative genera such as Pseudoalteromonas haloplanktis or Psychrobacter immobilis, that may contribute to the characteristics of cheese produced through traditional methods.
Catalog of microscopic organisms of the Everglades, Part 1—The cyanobacteria
Rosen, Barry H.; Mareš, Jan
2016-07-27
The microscopic organisms of the Everglades include numerous prokaryotic organisms, including the eubacteria, such as the cyanobacteria and non-photosynthetic bacteria, as well as several eukaryotic algae and protozoa that form the base of the food web. This report is part 1 in a series of reports that describe microscopic organisms encountered during the examination of several hundred samples collected in the southern Everglades. Part 1 describes the cyanobacteria and includes a suite of images and the most current taxonomic treatment of each taxon. The majority of the images are of live organisms, allowing their true color to be represented. A number of potential new species are illustrated; however, corroborating evidence from a genetic analysis of the morphological characteristics is needed to confirm these designations as new species. Part 1 also includes images of eubacteria that resemble cyanobacteria. Additional parts of the report on microscopic organisms of the Everglades are currently underway, such as the green algae and diatoms. The report also serves as the basis for a taxonomic image database that will provide a digital record of the Everglades microscopic flora and fauna. It is anticipated that these images will facilitate current and future ecological studies on the Everglades, such as understanding food-web dynamics, sediment formation and accumulation, the effects of nutrients and flow, and climate change.
Chemical abundances in low surface brightness galaxies: Implications for their evolution
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Mcgaugh, S. S.; Bothun, G. D.
1993-01-01
Low Surface Brightness (LSB) galaxies are an important but often neglected part of the galaxy content of the universe. Their importance stems both from the selection effects which cause them to be under-represented in galaxy catalogs, and from what they can tell us about the physical processes of galaxy evolution that has resulted in something other than the traditional Hubble sequence of spirals. An important constraint for any evolutionary model is the present day chemical abundances of LSB disks. Towards this end, spectra for a sample of 75 H 2 regions distributed in 20 LSB disks galaxies were obtained. Structurally, this sample is defined as having B(0) fainter than 23.0 mag arcsec(sup -2) and scale lengths that cluster either around 3 kpc or 10 kpc. In fact, structurally, these galaxies are very similar to the high surface brightness spirals which define the Hubble sequence. Thus, our sample galaxies are not dwarf galaxies but instead have masses comparable to or in excess of the Milky Way. The basic results from these observations are summarized.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Mathur, S.; García, R. A.; Beck, P. G.
Asteroseismology has proven to be an excellent tool to determine not only global stellar properties with good precision, but also to infer the stellar structure, dynamics, and evolution for a large sample of Kepler stars. Prior to the launch of the mission, the properties of Kepler targets were inferred from broadband photometry, leading to the Kepler Input Catalog (KIC). The KIC was later revised in the Kepler Star Properties Catalog, based on literature values and an asteroseismic analysis of stars that were unclassified in the KIC. Here, we present an asteroseismic analysis of 45,400 stars that were classified as dwarfsmore » in the Kepler Star Properties Catalog. We found that around 2% of the sample shows acoustic modes in the typical frequency range that put them in the red-giant category rather than the cool dwarf category. We analyze the asteroseismic properties of these stars, derive their surface gravities, masses, and radii, and present updated effective temperatures and distances. We show that the sample is significantly fainter than the previously known oscillating giants in the Kepler field, with the faintest stars reaching down to a Kepler magnitude of Kp ∼ 16. We demonstrate that 404 stars are at distances beyond 5 kpc and that the stars are significantly less massive than for the original Kepler red-giant sample, consistent with a population of distant halo giants. A comparison with a galactic population model shows that up to 40 stars might be genuine halo giants, which would increase the number of known asteroseismic halo stars by a factor of 4. The detections presented here will provide a valuable sample for galactic archeology studies.« less
Small Libraries Online: Automating Circulation and Public Access Catalogs. Participant Workbook.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Garcia, C. Rebecca; Bridge, Frank R.
This workbook, meant to be used in a workshop, presents information on and guidelines for automating small libraries: (1) planning for automation; (2) automated system procurement and evaluation; (3) data conversion issues; (4) sample configuration worksheets; (5) sample configuration costs; (6) site preparation; (7) training; and (8) acceptance…
TWO-STAGE SAMPLING FOR RARE RESOURCES: SAMPLING WETLANDS IN THE JUNIATA WATERSHED OF PENNSYLVANIA
The National Wetland Inventory (NWI) is the most complete catalog of wetland location, type, and extent that is presently available. As such, it is the default frame for developing a survey to assess wetland condition. However, experience suggests that the NWI may miss a substan...
49 CFR Appendix A to Part 221 - Procedures for Approval of Rear End Marking Devices
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... description of the device including the type, luminance description, size of lens, manufacturer and catalog number, lamp manufacturer, lamp type and model number, and any auxiliary optics used. (2) A certification...
49 CFR Appendix A to Part 221 - Procedures for Approval of Rear End Marking Devices
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... description of the device including the type, luminance description, size of lens, manufacturer and catalog number, lamp manufacturer, lamp type and model number, and any auxiliary optics used. (2) A certification...
Dawn Mission to Vesta and Ceres Lithograph
2007-01-01
This artist's lithograph features general information, significant dates, and interesting facts on the backabout asteroid Vesta and dwarf planet Ceres and is part of the Mission Art series from NASA's Dawn mission. http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA19370
Magellan Perspective View of Sedna Planitia, 45° N, 11° E
1998-06-04
This perspective view of Venus, generated by computer from NASA Magellan data and color-coded with emissivity, shows part of the lowland plains in Sedna Planitia. http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA00307
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Photometric variability of BeSS-KELT stars (Labadie-Bartz+, 2017)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Labadie-Bartz, J.; Pepper, J.; McSwain, M. V.; Bjorkman, J. E.; Bjorkman, K. S.; Lund, M. B.; Rodriguez, J. E.; Stassun, K. G.; Stevens, D. J.; James, D. J.; Kuhn, R. B.; Siverd, R. J.; Beatty, T. G.
2018-04-01
Kilodegree Extremely Little Telescope (KELT) is a photometric survey using two small-aperture (42 mm) wide-field (26°x26°) telescopes, with a northern location at Winer Observatory in Arizona in the United States, and a southern location at the South African Astronomical Observatory near Sutherland, South Africa. The Be Star Spectra (BeSS) database is a continually updated catalog that attempts to include all known Be stars, as well as their stellar parameters. This catalog is based primarily on the catalog of classical Be stars published by Jaschek et al. (1982, Cat. III/67) but also includes more recently discovered Be stars from a variety of sources (e.g., Neiner et al. 2005ApJS..156..237N; Martayan et al. 2006A&A...445..931M). From the BeSS database, we compiled a list of all the classical Be stars with 7
Early-type galaxies: Automated reduction and analysis of ROSAT PSPC data
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Mackie, G.; Fabbiano, G.; Harnden, F. R., Jr.; Kim, D.-W.; Maggio, A.; Micela, G.; Sciortino, S.; Ciliegi, P.
1996-01-01
Preliminary results of early-type galaxies that will be part of a galaxy catalog to be derived from the complete Rosat data base are presented. The stored data were reduced and analyzed by an automatic pipeline. This pipeline is based on a command language scrip. The important features of the pipeline include new data time screening in order to maximize the signal to noise ratio of faint point-like sources, source detection via a wavelet algorithm, and the identification of sources with objects from existing catalogs. The pipeline outputs include reduced images, contour maps, surface brightness profiles, spectra, color and hardness ratios.
A statistical assessment of zero-polarization catalogues
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Clarke, D.; Naghizadeh-Khouei, J.; Simmons, J. F. L.; Stewart, B. G.
1993-03-01
The statistical behavior associated with polarization measurements is presented. The cumulative distribution function for measurements of unpolarized sources normalized by the measurement error is considered and Kolmogorov tests have been applied to data which might be considered as being representative of assemblies of unpolarized stars. Tinbergen's (1979, 1982) and Piirola's I (1977) catalogs have been examined and reveal shortcomings, the former indicating the presence of uncorrected instrumental polarization in part of the data and both suggesting that the quoted errors are in general slightly underestimated. Citings of these catalogs as providing evidence that middle-type stars in general exhibit weak intrinsic polarizations are shown to be invalid.
Applications catalog of pyrotechnically actuated devices/systems
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Seeholzer, Thomas L.; Smith, Floyd Z.; Eastwood, Charles W.; Steffes, Paul R.
1995-01-01
A compilation of basic information on pyrotechnically actuated devices/systems used in NASA aerospace and aeronautic applications was formatted into a catalog. The intent is to provide (1) a quick reference digest of the types of operational pyro mechanisms and (2) a source of contacts for further details. Data on these items was furnished by the NASA Centers that developed and/or utilized such devices to perform specific functions on spacecraft, launch vehicles, aircraft, and ground support equipment. Information entries include an item title, user center name, commercial contractor/vendor, identifying part number(s), a basic figure, briefly described purpose and operation, previous usage, and operational limits/requirements.
Constructing a WISE High Resolution Galaxy Atlas
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Jarrett, T. H.; Masci, F.; Tsai, C. W.; Petty, S.; Cluver, M.; Assef, Roberto J.; Benford, D.; Blain, A.; Bridge, C.; Donoso, E.;
2012-01-01
After eight months of continuous observations, the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) mapped the entire sky at 3.4 micron, 4.6 micron, 12 micron, and 22 micron. We have begun a dedicated WISE High Resolution Galaxy Atlas project to fully characterize large, nearby galaxies and produce a legacy image atlas and source catalog. Here we summarize the deconvolution techniques used to significantly improve the spatial resolution of WISE imaging, specifically designed to study the internal anatomy of nearby galaxies. As a case study, we present results for the galaxy NGC 1566, comparing the WISE enhanced-resolution image processing to that of Spitzer, Galaxy Evolution Explorer, and ground-based imaging. This is the first paper in a two-part series; results for a larger sample of nearby galaxies are presented in the second paper.
1988-03-01
PACKAGE BODY ) TLCSC P661 (CATALOG #P106-0) This package contains the CAMP parts required to do the vaypoint steering portion of navigation. The...3.3.4.1.6 PROCESSING The following describes the processing performed by this part: package body WaypointSteering is package body ...Steering_Vector_Operations is separate; package body Steering_Vector_Operations_with_Arcsin is separate; procedure Compute Turn_Angle_and Direction (UnitNormal C
VizieR Online Data Catalog: ChaMP. I. First X-ray source catalog (Kim+, 2004)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kim, D.-W.; Cameron, R. A.; Drake, J. J.; Evans, N. R.; Freeman, P.; Gaetz, T. J.; Ghosh, H.; Green, P. J.; Harnden, F. R. Jr; Karovska, M.; Kashyap, V.; Maksym, P. W.; Ratzlaff, P. W.; Schlegel, E. M.; Silverman, J. D.; Tananbaum, H. D.; Vikhlinin, A. A.; Wilkes, B. J.; Grimes, J. P.
2004-01-01
The Chandra Multiwavelength Project (ChaMP) is a wide-area (~14deg2 < survey of serendipitous Chandra X-ray sources, aiming to establish fair statistical samples covering a wide range of characteristics (such as absorbed active galactic nuclei, high-z clusters of galaxies) at flux levels (fX~10-15 to 10-14erg/s/cm2) ) intermediate between the Chandra deep surveys and previous missions. We present the first ChaMP catalog, which consists of 991 near on-axis, bright X-ray sources obtained from the initial sample of 62 observations. The data have been uniformly reduced and analyzed with techniques specifically developed for the ChaMP and then validated by visual examination. To assess source reliability and positional uncertainty, we perform a series of simulations and also use Chandra data to complement the simulation study. The false source detection rate is found to be as good as or better than expected for a given limiting threshold. On the other hand, the chance of missing a real source is rather complex, depending on the source counts, off-axis distance (or PSF), and background rate. The positional error (95% confidence level) is usually less than 1" for a bright source, regardless of its off-axis distance, while it can be as large as 4" for a weak source (~20counts) at a large off-axis distance (Doff-axis>8'). We have also developed new methods to find spatially extended or temporary variable sources, and those sources are listed in the catalog. (5 data files).
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Distance-limited sample of MYSOs (Maud+, 2015)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Maud, L. T.; Lumsden, S. L.; Moore, T. J. T.; Mottram, J. C.; Urquhart, J. S.; Cicchini, A.
2016-01-01
The sources were chosen from all MYSOs and HII regions in the RMS survey that are located within a distance of ~6kpc, have luminosities >~3000 L{sun}, and are observable with the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT; declinations -25° to +65°), with some additional right ascension constraints set by the observing dates. In addition, for the HII regions, only those sources which appear compact in higher resolution mid-IR images were selected. Finally although all of the sources with L>10000L{sun} were observed, only a random sample of the less luminous ones were included All 99 sources were observed with the JCMT as part of projects M07AU08, M07BU16, M08AU19 and M08BU18 during 2007 and 2008. The 15m dish yields a full-width at half-maximum (FWHM) beam size of 15.3-arcsec at ~329GHz for the C18O (3-2) line. (4 data files).
The VISTA Carina Nebula Survey . I. Introduction and source catalog
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Preibisch, T.; Zeidler, P.; Ratzka, T.; Roccatagliata, V.; Petr-Gotzens, M. G.
2014-12-01
Context. The Carina Nebula is one of the most massive and active star-forming regions in our Galaxy and has been studied with numerous multiwavelength observations in the past five years. However, most of these studies were restricted to the inner parts (≲1 square-degree) of the nebula, and thus covered only a small fraction of the whole cloud complex. Aims: Our aim was to conduct a near-infrared survey that covers the full spatial extent (~5 square-degrees) of the Carina Nebula complex and is sensitive enough to detect all associated young stars through extinctions of up to AV ≈ 6 mag. Methods: We used the 4m Visible and Infrared Survey Telescope for Astronomy (VISTA) of ESO to map an area of 6.7 square-degrees around the Carina Nebula in the near-infrared J-, H-, Ks-bands. Results: The analysis of our VISTA data revealed 4 840 807 individual near-infrared sources, 3 951 580 of which are detected in at least two bands. The faintest S/N ≥ 3 detections have magnitudes of J ≈ 21.2, H ≈ 19.9, and Ks ≈ 19.3. For objects at the distance of the Carina Nebula (2.3 kpc), our catalog is estimated to be complete down to stellar masses of ≈0.1 M⊙ for young stars with extinctions of AV ≈ 5 mag; for regions in the brightest parts of the central nebula with particularly strong diffuse emission, the completeness limit is at slightly higher stellar masses. We describe the photometric calibration, the characteristics, and the quality of these data. VISTA images of several newly detected or yet rarely studied clusters in the outer parts of the Carina Nebula complex are presented. Finally, a list of stars with high proper motions that were discovered in our analysis is provided in an appendix. Conclusions: Our catalog represents by far the most comprehensive deep near-infrared catalog of the Carina Nebula complex. It provides a new basis for spatially complete investigations of the young stellar population in this important star-forming complex. Based on observations made with ESO Telescopes at the La Silla Paranal Observatory under programme ID 088.C-0117.The catalog (full Table 2) is only available at the CDS via anonymous ftp to http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr (ftp://130.79.128.5) or via http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr/viz-bin/qcat?J/A+A/572/A116
The DEIMOS 10K Spectroscopic Survey Catalog of the COSMOS Field
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hasinger, G.; Capak, P.; Salvato, M.; Barger, A. J.; Cowie, L. L.; Faisst, A.; Hemmati, S.; Kakazu, Y.; Kartaltepe, J.; Masters, D.; Mobasher, B.; Nayyeri, H.; Sanders, D.; Scoville, N. Z.; Suh, H.; Steinhardt, C.; Yang, Fengwei
2018-05-01
We present a catalog of 10,718 objects in the COSMOS field, observed through multi-slit spectroscopy with the Deep Imaging Multi-Object Spectrograph (DEIMOS) on the Keck II telescope in the wavelength range ∼5500–9800 Å. The catalog contains 6617 objects with high-quality spectra (two or more spectral features), and 1798 objects with a single spectroscopic feature confirmed by the photometric redshift. For 2024 typically faint objects, we could not obtain reliable redshifts. The objects have been selected from a variety of input catalogs based on multi-wavelength observations in the field, and thus have a diverse selection function, which enables the study of the diversity in the galaxy population. The magnitude distribution of our objects is peaked at I AB ∼ 23 and K AB ∼ 21, with a secondary peak at K AB ∼ 24. We sample a broad redshift distribution in the range 0 < z < 6, with one peak at z ∼ 1, and another one around z ∼ 4. We have identified 13 redshift spikes at z > 0.65 with chance probabilities < 4 × 10‑4, some of which are clearly related to protocluster structures of sizes >10 Mpc. An object-to-object comparison with a multitude of other spectroscopic samples in the same field shows that our DEIMOS sample is among the best in terms of fraction of spectroscopic failures and relative redshift accuracy. We have determined the fraction of spectroscopic blends to about 0.8% in our sample. This is likely a lower limit and at any rate well below the most pessimistic expectations. Interestingly, we find evidence for strong lensing of Lyα background emitters within the slits of 12 of our target galaxies, increasing their apparent density by about a factor of 4. The data presented herein were obtained at the W. M. Keck Observatory, which is operated as a scientific partnership among the California Institute of Technology, the University of California and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. The Observatory was made possible by the generous financial support of the W. M. Keck Foundation.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Khorunzhev, G. A.; Burenin, R. A.; Meshcheryakov, A. V.; Sazonov, S. Yu.
2016-05-01
We have compiled a catalog of 903 candidates for type 1 quasars at redshifts 3 < z < 5.5 selected among the X-ray sources of the "serendipitous" XMM-Newton survey presented in the 3XMMDR4 catalog (the median X-ray flux is ≈5 × 10-15 erg s-1 cm-2 in the 0.5-2 keV energy band) and located at high Galactic latitudes | b| > 20° in Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) fields with a total area of about 300 deg2. Photometric SDSS data as well infrared 2MASS and WISE data were used to select the objects. We selected the point sources from the photometric SDSS catalog with a magnitude error δ mz' < 0.2 and a color i' - z' < 0.6 (to first eliminate the M-type stars). For the selected sources, we have calculated the dependences χ2( z) for various spectral templates from the library that we compiled for these purposes using the EAZY software. Based on these data, we have rejected the objects whose spectral energy distributions are better described by the templates of stars at z = 0 and obtained a sample of quasars with photometric redshift estimates 2.75 < z phot < 5.5. The selection completeness of known quasars at z spec > 3 in the investigated fields is shown to be about 80%. The normalized median absolute deviation (Δ z = | z spec - z phot|) is σ Δ z /(1+ z spec) = 0.07, while the outlier fraction is η = 9% when Δ z/(1 + z cпek.) > 0.2. The number of objects per unit area in our sample exceeds the number of quasars in the spectroscopic SDSS sample at the same redshifts approximately by a factor of 1.5. The subsequent spectroscopic testing of the redshifts of our selected candidates for quasars at 3 < z < 5.5 will allow the purity of this sample to be estimated more accurately.
The Five Year Fermi/GBM Magnetar Burst Catalog
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Collazzi, A. C.; Kouveliotou, C.; van der Horst, A. J.; Younes, G. A.; Kaneko, Y.; Göğüş, E.; Lin, L.; Granot, J.; Finger, M. H.; Chaplin, V. L.; Huppenkothen, D.; Watts, A. L.; von Kienlin, A.; Baring, M. G.; Gruber, D.; Bhat, P. N.; Gibby, M. H.; Gehrels, N.; McEnery, J.; van der Klis, M.; Wijers, R. A. M. J.
2015-05-01
Since launch in 2008, the Fermi Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (GBM) has detected many hundreds of bursts from magnetar sources. While the vast majority of these bursts have been attributed to several known magnetars, there is also a small sample of magnetar-like bursts of unknown origin. Here, we present the Fermi/GBM magnetar catalog, providing the results of the temporal and spectral analyses of 440 magnetar bursts with high temporal and spectral resolution. This catalog covers the first five years of GBM magnetar observations, from 2008 July to 2013 June. We provide durations, spectral parameters for various models, fluences, and peak fluxes for all the bursts, as well as a detailed temporal analysis for SGR J1550-5418 bursts. Finally, we suggest that some of the bursts of unknown origin are associated with the newly discovered magnetar 3XMM J185246.6+0033.7.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: MYStIX candidate protostars (Romine+, 2016)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Romine, G.; Feigelson, E. D.; Getman, K. V.; Kuhn, M. A.; Povich, M. S.
2017-04-01
The present study seeks protostars from the Massive Young Star-forming complex in Infrared and X-ray (MYStIX) survey catalogs. We combine objects with protostellar infrared SEDs and 4.5um excesses with X-ray sources exhibiting ultrahard spectra denoting very heavy obscuration. These criteria filter away nearly all of the older Class II-III stars and contaminant populations, but give very incomplete samples. The result is a list of 1109 protostellar candidates in 14 star-forming regions. See sections 1 and 2 for further explanations. The reliability of the catalog is strengthened because a large majority (86%) are found to be associated with dense cores seen in Herschel 500um maps that trace cold dust emission. However, the candidate list requires more detailed study for confirmation and cannot be viewed as an unbiased view of star formation in the clouds. (3 data files).
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Miyaoka, Keita; Okabe, Nobuhiro; Kitaguchi, Takao; Oguri, Masamune; Fukazawa, Yasushi; Mandelbaum, Rachel; Medezinski, Elinor; Babazaki, Yasunori; Nishizawa, Atsushi J.; Hamana, Takashi; Lin, Yen-Ting; Akamatsu, Hiroki; Chiu, I.-Non; Fujita, Yutaka; Ichinohe, Yuto; Komiyama, Yutaka; Sasaki, Toru; Takizawa, Motokazu; Ueda, Shutaro; Umetsu, Keiichi; Coupon, Jean; Hikage, Chiaki; Hoshino, Akio; Leauthaud, Alexie; Matsushita, Kyoko; Mitsuishi, Ikuyuki; Miyatake, Hironao; Miyazaki, Satoshi; More, Surhud; Nakazawa, Kazuhiro; Ota, Naomi; Sato, Kousuke; Spergel, David; Tamura, Takayuki; Tanaka, Masayuki; Tanaka, Manobu M.; Utsumi, Yousuke
2018-01-01
We present a joint X-ray, optical, and weak-lensing analysis for X-ray luminous galaxy clusters selected from the MCXC (Meta-Catalog of X-Ray Detected Clusters of Galaxies) cluster catalog in the Hyper Suprime-Cam Subaru Strategic Program (HSC-SSP) survey field with S16A data. As a pilot study for a series of papers, we measure hydrostatic equilibrium (HE) masses using XMM-Newton data for four clusters in the current coverage area out of a sample of 22 MCXC clusters. We additionally analyze a non-MCXC cluster associated with one MCXC cluster. We show that HE masses for the MCXC clusters are correlated with cluster richness from the CAMIRA catalog, while that for the non-MCXC cluster deviates from the scaling relation. The mass normalization of the relationship between cluster richness and HE mass is compatible with one inferred by matching CAMIRA cluster abundance with a theoretical halo mass function. The mean gas mass fraction based on HE masses for the MCXC clusters is
The Exposure Data Landscape for Manufactured Chemicals
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is developing chemical screening and prioritization programs to evaluate environmental chemicals for potential risk to human health in a rapid and efficient manner. As part of these efforts, it is important to catalog available information...
1996-03-07
This image is a full-resolution mosaic of several images from NASA Magellan spacecraft. The radar smooth region in the northern part of the image is Lakshmi Planum, a high plateau region above the mean planetary radius. http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA00240
Ariel at Voyager Closest Approach
2000-06-02
This picture is part of NASA Voyager 2 imaging sequence of Ariel, a moon of Uranus taken on January 24, 1986. The complexity of Ariel surface indicates that a variety of geologic processes have occurred. http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA00037
A study of the cold cores population in the Perseus star-forming regions.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Pezzuto, S.; Fiorellino, E.; Benedettini, M.; Schisano, E.; Elia, D.; André, P.; Könyves, V.; Ladjelate, B.; Di Francesco, J.; Piccotti, L.; Herschel Gould Belt Survey Consortium
As part of the Herschel Gould Belt survey, the Perseus star-forming cloud was observed with the Herschel PACS and SPIRE instruments. Source catalogs are preliminary, as well as the here presented core mass function.
41 CFR 101-30.001 - Applicability.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-07-01
....001 Section 101-30.001 Public Contracts and Property Management Federal Property Management Regulations System FEDERAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS SUPPLY AND PROCUREMENT 30-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM § 101-30.001 Applicability. The provisions of this part are applicable to all Federal agencies. However...
Ganymede - Dark Terrain in Galileo Regio
1997-09-07
This view of a part of the Galileo Regio region on Jupiter moon Ganymede shows fine details of the dark terrain that makes up about half of the surface of the planet-sized moon. http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA00278
36 CFR 1237.3 - What standards are incorporated by reference in this part?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-07-01
... at http://webstore.ansi.org. (1) ISO 18906: 2000 (“ISO 18906”), Imaging Materials—Photographic Films.... Box 9109, Quincy, MA 02269-9101, phone number (617) 770-3000 or online at http://catalog.nfpa.org. (1...
Bradbury Science Museum Collections Inventory Photos Disc #5
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Strohmeyer, Wendy J.
The photos on Bradbury Science Museum Collections Inventory Photos Disc #5 is another in an ongoing effort to catalog all artifacts held by the Museum. Photos will be used as part of the condition report for the artifact, and will become part of the collection record in the collections database for that artifact. The collections database will be publically searchable on the Museum website.
'Bradbury Science Museum Collections Inventory Photos Disc #4
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Strohmeyer, Wendy J.
The photos on Bradbury Science Museum Collections Inventory Photos Disc #4 is another in an ongoing effort to catalog all artifacts held by the Museum. Photos will be used as part of the condition report for the artifact, and will become part of the collection record in the collections database for that artifact. The collections database will be publically searchable on the Museum website.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Haynes, Martha P.; Giovanelli, Riccardo; Martin, Ann M.
We present a current catalog of 21 cm H I line sources extracted from the Arecibo Legacy Fast Arecibo L-band Feed Array (ALFALFA) survey over {approx}2800 deg{sup 2} of sky: the {alpha}.40 catalog. Covering 40% of the final survey area, the {alpha}.40 catalog contains 15,855 sources in the regions 07{sup h}30{sup m} < R.A. < 16{sup h}30{sup m}, +04 Degree-Sign < decl. <+16 Degree-Sign , and +24 Degree-Sign < decl. <+28 Degree-Sign and 22{sup h} < R.A. < 03{sup h}, +14 Degree-Sign < decl. <+16 Degree-Sign , and +24 Degree-Sign < decl. < + 32 Degree-Sign . Of those, 15,041more » are certainly extragalactic, yielding a source density of 5.3 galaxies per deg{sup 2}, a factor of 29 improvement over the catalog extracted from the H I Parkes All-Sky Survey. In addition to the source centroid positions, H I line flux densities, recessional velocities, and line widths, the catalog includes the coordinates of the most probable optical counterpart of each H I line detection, and a separate compilation provides a cross-match to identifications given in the photometric and spectroscopic catalogs associated with the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 7. Fewer than 2% of the extragalactic H I line sources cannot be identified with a feasible optical counterpart; some of those may be rare OH megamasers at 0.16 < z < 0.25. A detailed analysis is presented of the completeness, width-dependent sensitivity function and bias inherent of the {alpha}.40 catalog. The impact of survey selection, distance errors, current volume coverage, and local large-scale structure on the derivation of the H I mass function is assessed. While {alpha}.40 does not yet provide a completely representative sampling of cosmological volume, derivations of the H I mass function using future data releases from ALFALFA will further improve both statistical and systematic uncertainties.« less
VizieR Online Data Catalog: WINGS: Deep optical phot. of 77 nearby clusters (Varela+, 2009)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Varela, J.; D'Onofrio, M.; Marmo, C.; Fasano, G.; Bettoni, D.; Cava, A.; Couch, J. W.; Dressler, A.; Kjaergaard, P.; Moles, M.; Pignatelli, E.; Poggianti, M. B.; Valentinuzzi, T.
2009-05-01
This is the second paper of a series devoted to the WIde Field Nearby Galaxy-cluster Survey (WINGS). WINGS is a long term project which is gathering wide-field, multi-band imaging and spectroscopy of galaxies in a complete sample of 77 X-ray selected, nearby clusters (0.04200deg). The main goal of this project is to establish a local reference for evolutionary studies of galaxies and galaxy clusters. This paper presents the optical (B,V) photometric catalogs of the WINGS sample and describes the procedures followed to construct them. We have paid special care to correctly treat the large extended galaxies (which includes the brightest cluster galaxies) and the reduction of the influence of the bright halos of very bright stars. We have constructed photometric catalogs based on wide-field images in B and V bands using SExtractor. Photometry has been performed on images in which large galaxies and halos of bright stars were removed after modeling them with elliptical isophotes. We publish deep optical photometric catalogs (90% complete at V21.7, which translates to ~ MV* + 6 at mean redshift), giving positions, geometrical parameters, and several total and aperture magnitudes for all the objects detected. For each field we have produced three catalogs containing galaxies, stars and objects of "unknown" classification (~16%). From simulations we found that the uncertainty of our photometry is quite dependent of the light profile of the objects with stars having the most robust photometry and de Vaucouleurs profiles showing higher uncertainties and also an additional bias of ~-0.2m. The star/galaxy classification of the bright objects (V<20) was checked visually making negligible the fraction of misclassified objects. For fainter objects, we found that simulations do not provide reliable estimates of the possible misclassification and therefore we have compared our data with that from deep counts of galaxies and star counts from models of our Galaxy. Both sets turned out to be consistent with our data within ~5% (in the ratio galaxies/total) up to V~24. Finally, we remark that the application of our special procedure to remove large halos improves the photometry of the large galaxies in our sample with respect to the use of blind automatic procedures and increases (~16%) the detection rate of objects projected onto them. (4 data files).
NEAR-INFRARED POLARIZATION SOURCE CATALOG OF THE NORTHEASTERN REGIONS OF THE LARGE MAGELLANIC CLOUD
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Kim, Jaeyeong; Pak, Soojong; Jeong, Woong-Seob
2016-01-15
We present a near-infrared band-merged photometric and polarimetric catalog for the 39′ × 69′ fields in the northeastern part of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), which were observed using SIRPOL, an imaging polarimeter of the InfraRed Survey Facility. This catalog lists 1858 sources brighter than 14 mag in the H band with a polarization signal-to-noise ratio greater than three in the J, H, or K{sub s} bands. Based on the relationship between the extinction and the polarization degree, we argue that the polarization mostly arises from dichroic extinctions caused by local interstellar dust in the LMC. This catalog allows usmore » to map polarization structures to examine the global geometry of the local magnetic field, and to show a statistical analysis of the polarization of each field to understand its polarization properties. In the selected fields with coherent polarization position angles, we estimate magnetic field strengths in the range of 3−25 μG using the Chandrasekhar–Fermi method. This implies the presence of large-scale magnetic fields on a scale of around 100 parsecs. When comparing mid- and far-infrared dust emission maps, we confirmed that the polarization patterns are well aligned with molecular clouds around the star-forming regions.« less
Towards a Comprehensive Catalog of Volcanic Seismicity
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Thompson, G.
2014-12-01
Catalogs of earthquakes located using differential travel-time techniques are a core product of volcano observatories, and while vital, they represent an incomplete perspective of volcanic seismicity. Many (often most) earthquakes are too small to locate accurately, and are omitted from available catalogs. Low frequency events, tremor and signals related to rockfalls, pyroclastic flows and lahars are not systematically catalogued, and yet from a hazard management perspective are exceedingly important. Because STA/LTA detection schemes break down in the presence of high amplitude tremor, swarms or dome collapses, catalogs may suggest low seismicity when seismicity peaks. We propose to develop a workflow and underlying software toolbox that can be applied to near-real-time and offline waveform data to produce comprehensive catalogs of volcanic seismicity. Existing tools to detect and locate phaseless signals will be adapted to fit within this framework. For this proof of concept the toolbox will be developed in MATLAB, extending the existing GISMO toolbox (an object-oriented MATLAB toolbox for seismic data analysis). Existing database schemas such as the CSS 3.0 will need to be extended to describe this wider range of volcano-seismic signals. WOVOdat may already incorporate many of the additional tables needed. Thus our framework may act as an interface between volcano observatories (or campaign-style research projects) and WOVOdat. We aim to take the further step of reducing volcano-seismic catalogs to sets of continuous metrics that are useful for recognizing data trends, and for feeding alarm systems and forecasting techniques. Previous experience has shown that frequency index, peak frequency, mean frequency, mean event rate, median event rate, and cumulative magnitude (or energy) are potentially useful metrics to generate for all catalogs at a 1-minute sample rate (directly comparable with RSAM and similar metrics derived from continuous data). Our framework includes tools to plot these metrics in a consistent manner. We work with data from unrest at Redoubt volcano and Soufriere Hills volcano to develop our framework.
The InterPlanetary Network Supplement to the Second Fermi GBM Catalog of Cosmic Gamma-Ray Bursts
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Hurley, K.; Aptekar, R. L.; Golenetskii, S. V.
InterPlanetary Network (IPN) data are presented for the gamma-ray bursts in the second Fermi Gamma-Ray Burst Monitor (GBM) catalog. Of the 462 bursts in that catalog between 2010 July 12 and 2012 July 11, 428, or 93%, were observed by at least 1 other instrument in the 9-spacecraft IPN. Of the 428, the localizations of 165 could be improved by triangulation. For these bursts, triangulation gives one or more annuli whose half-widths vary between about 2.′3° and 16°, depending on the peak flux, fluence, time history, arrival direction, and the distance between the spacecraft. We compare the IPN localizations withmore » the GBM 1 σ , 2 σ , and 3 σ error contours and find good agreement between them. The IPN 3 σ error boxes have areas between about 8 square arcminutes and 380 square degrees, and are an average of 2500 times smaller than the corresponding GBM 3 σ localizations. We identify four bursts in the IPN/GBM sample whose origins were given as “uncertain,” but may in fact be cosmic. This leads to an estimate of over 99% completeness for the GBM catalog.« less
Galaxy Groups in the 2Mass Redshift Survey
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lu, Yi; Yang, Xiaohu; Shi, Feng; Mo, H. J.; Tweed, Dylan; Wang, Huiyuan; Zhang, Youcai; Li, Shijie; Lim, S. H.
2016-11-01
A galaxy group catalog is constructed from the 2MASS Redshift Survey (2MRS) with the use of a halo-based group finder. The halo mass associated with a group is estimated using a “GAP” method based on the luminosity of the central galaxy and its gap with other member galaxies. Tests using mock samples show that this method is reliable, particularly for poor systems containing only a few members. On average, 80% of all the groups have completeness \\gt 0.8, and about 65% of the groups have zero contamination. Halo masses are estimated with a typical uncertainty of ∼ 0.35 {dex}. The application of the group finder to the 2MRS gives 29,904 groups from a total of 43,246 galaxies at z≤slant 0.08, with 5286 groups having two or more members. Some basic properties of this group catalog is presented, and comparisons are made with other group catalogs in overlap regions. With a depth to z∼ 0.08 and uniformly covering about 91% of the whole sky, this group catalog provides a useful database to study galaxies in the local cosmic web, and to reconstruct the mass distribution in the local universe.
Identification of Active Galactic Nuclei through HST optical variability in the GOODS South field
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Pouliasis, Ektoras; Georgantopoulos; Bonanos, A.; HCV Team
2016-08-01
This work aims to identify AGN in the GOODS South deep field through optical variability. This method can easily identify low-luminosity AGN. In particular, we use images in the z-band obtained from the Hubble Space Telescope with the ACS/WFC camera over 5 epochs separated by ~45 days. Aperture photometry has been performed using SExtractor to extract the lightcurves. Several variability indices, such as the median absolute deviation, excess variance, and sigma were applied to automatically identify the variable sources. After removing artifacts, stars and supernovae from the variable selected sample and keeping only those sources with known photometric or spectroscopic redshift, the optical variability was compared to variability in other wavelengths (X-rays, mid-IR, radio). This multi-wavelength study provides important constraints on the structure and the properties of the AGN and their relation to their hosts. This work is a part of the validation of the Hubble Catalog of Variables (HCV) project, which has been launched at the National Observatory of Athens by ESA, and aims to identify all sources (pointlike and extended) showing variability, based on the Hubble Source Catalog (HSC, Whitmore et al. 2015). The HSC version 1 was released in February 2015 and includes 80 million sources imaged with the WFPC2, ACS/WFC, WFC3/UVIS and WFC3/IR cameras.
LSST Resources for the Community
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Jones, R. Lynne
2011-01-01
LSST will generate 100 petabytes of images and 20 petabytes of catalogs, covering 18,000-20,000 square degrees of area sampled every few days, throughout a total of ten years of time -- all publicly available and exquisitely calibrated. The primary access to this data will be through Data Access Centers (DACs). DACs will provide access to catalogs of sources (single detections from individual images) and objects (associations of sources from multiple images). Simple user interfaces or direct SQL queries at the DAC can return user-specified portions of data from catalogs or images. More complex manipulations of the data, such as calculating multi-point correlation functions or creating alternative photo-z measurements on terabyte-scale data, can be completed with the DAC's own resources. Even more data-intensive computations requiring access to large numbers of image pixels on petabyte-scale could also be conducted at the DAC, using compute resources allocated in a similar manner to a TAC. DAC resources will be available to all individuals in member countries or institutes and LSST science collaborations. DACs will also assist investigators with requests for allocations at national facilities such as the Petascale Computing Facility, TeraGrid, and Open Science Grid. Using data on this scale requires new approaches to accessibility and analysis which are being developed through interactions with the LSST Science Collaborations. We are producing simulated images (as might be acquired by LSST) based on models of the universe and generating catalogs from these images (as well as from the base model) using the LSST data management framework in a series of data challenges. The resulting images and catalogs are being made available to the science collaborations to verify the algorithms and develop user interfaces. All LSST software is open source and available online, including preliminary catalog formats. We encourage feedback from the community.
Climate data system supports FIRE
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Olsen, Lola M.; Iascone, Dominick; Reph, Mary G.
1990-01-01
The NASA Climate Data System (NCDS) at Goddard Space Flight Center is serving as the FIRE Central Archive, providing a centralized data holding and data cataloging service for the FIRE project. NCDS members are carrying out their responsibilities by holding all reduced observations and data analysis products submitted by individual principal investigators in the agreed upon format, by holding all satellite data sets required for FIRE, by providing copies of any of these data sets to FIRE investigators, and by producing and updating a catalog with information about the FIRE holdings. FIRE researchers were requested to provide their reduced data sets in the Standard Data Format (SDF) to the FIRE Central Archive. This standard format is proving to be of value. An improved SDF document is now available. The document provides an example from an actual FIRE SDF data set and clearly states the guidelines for formatting data in SDF. NCDS has received SDF tapes from a number of investigators. These tapes were analyzed and comments provided to the producers. One product which is now available is William J. Syrett's sodar data product from the Stratocumulus Intensive Field Observation. Sample plots from all SDF tapes submitted to the archive will be available to FSET members. Related cloud products are also available through NCDS. Entries describing the FIRE data sets are being provided for the NCDS on-line catalog. Detailed information for the Extended Time Observations is available in the general FIRE catalog entry. Separate catalog entries are being written for the Cirrus Intensive Field Observation (IFO) and for the Marine Stratocumulus IFO. Short descriptions of each FIRE data set will be installed into the NCDS Summary Catalog.
On the universality of the two-point galaxy correlation function
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Davis, Marc; Meiksin, Avery; Strauss, Michael A.; Da Costa, L. Nicolaci; Yahil, Amos
1988-01-01
The behavior of the two-point galaxy correlation function in volume-limited subsamples of three complete redshift surveys is investigated. The correlation length is shown to scale approximately as the square root of the distance limit in both the CfA and Southern Sky catalogs, but to be independent of the distance limit in the IRAS sample. This effect is found to be due to factors such as the large positive density fluctuations in the foreground of the optically selected catalogs biasing the correlation length estimate downward, and the brightest galaxies appearing to be more strongly clustered than the mean.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Faint blue objects at high galactic latitude (Mitchell+, 2004)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Mitchell, K. J.; Usher, P. D.
2006-11-01
The US (UV-excess Starlike) survey has cataloged 3987 objects in 7 high Galactic latitude fields according to their optical colors, magnitudes, and morphologies using photographic techniques. This paper analyzes the effectiveness of the survey at producing finding lists for complete samples of hot stars and quasars that exhibit blue and/or ultraviolet excess (B-UVX) relative to the colors of halo F and G subdwarf stars. A table of 599 spectroscopic identifications summarizes the spectroscopic coverage of the US objects that has been accomplished to date. (6 data files).
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Radial velocities of NGP wide binaries (Latham+, 1991)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Latham, D. W.; Mazeh, T.; Davis, R. J.; Stefanik, R. P.; Abt, H. A.
2017-05-01
All 244 stars brighter than V magnitude 12.0 in a magnetic tape version of the Weistrop catalog (1980, private communication) were observed with the CfA digital speedometers. Three of the stars near the faint limit of the sample turned out to be close visual pairs, with angular separations between 1.4 and 4.0 arcsec. Although we do not have accurate photometry of the individual components in these pairs, we estimate that they are all fainter than the 12.0mag limit of the survey. Thus our data table has 247 entries. (5 data files).
Construcción de un catálogo de cúmulos de galaxias en proceso de colisión
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
de los Ríos, M.; Domínguez, M. J.; Paz, D.
2015-08-01
In this work we present first results of the identification of colliding galaxy clusters in galaxy catalogs with redshift measurements (SDSS, 2DF), and introduce the methodology. We calibrated a method by studying the merger trees of clusters in a mock catalog based on a full-blown semi-analytic model of galaxy formation on top of the Millenium cosmological simulation. We also discuss future actions for studding our sample of colliding galaxy clusters, including x-ray observations and mass reconstruction obtained by using weak gravitational lenses.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Hot subdwarf stars in LAMOST DR1 (Luo+, 2016)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Luo, Y.-P.; Nemeth, P.; Liu, C.; Deng, L.-C.; Han, Z.-W.
2018-01-01
We present a catalog of 166 spectroscopically identified hot subdwarf stars from LAMOST DR1, 44 of which show the characteristics of cool companions in their optical spectra. Atmospheric parameters of 122 subdwarf stars with non-composite spectra were measured by fitting the profiles of hydrogen (H) and helium (He) lines with synthetic spectra from non-LTE model atmospheres. A unique property of our sample is that it covers a large range in apparent magnitude and galactic latitude, therefore it contains a mix of stars from different populations and galactic environments. (3 data files).
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Smith, T.; Arce, A. C.; Ji, C.
2016-12-01
Waveform cross-correlation technique is widely used to improve the detection of small magnitude events induced by hydraulic fracturing. However, when events are detected, assigning a reliable magnitude is a challenging task, especially considering their small signal amplitude and high background noise during injections. In this study, we adopt the Match & Locate algorithm (M&L, Zhang and Wen, 2015) to analyze seven hours of continuous seismic observations from a hydraulic fracturing experiment in Central California. The site of the stimulated region is only 300-400m away from a 16-receiver vertical-borehole array which spans 230 m. The sampling rate is 4000 Hz. Both the injection sites and borehole array are more than 1.7 km below the surface. This dataset has previously been studied by an industry group, producing a catalog of 1134 events with moment magnitudes (Mw) ranging from -3.1 to -0.9. In this study, we select 202 events from this catalog with high signal to noise ratios to use as templates. Our M&L analysis produces a new catalog that contains 2119 events, which is 10 times more detections than the number of templates and about two times the original catalog. Using these two catalogs, we investigate the relationship of moment magnitude difference (ΔMW) and local magnitude difference (ΔML) between the detected event and corresponding template event. ΔML is computed using the peak amplitude ratio between the detected and template event for each channel. Our analysis yields an empirical relationship of ΔMW=0.64-0.65ΔML with an R2 of 0.99. The coefficient of 2/3 suggests that the information of the event's corner frequency is entirely lost (Hanks and Boore, 1984). The cause might not be unique, which implies that Earth's attenuation at this depth range (>1.7 km) is significant; or the 4000 Hz sampling rate is not sufficient. This relationship is crucial to estimate the b-value of the microseismicity induced by hydraulic fracture experiments. The analysis using the M&L catalog with the relation ΔMW = 2/3*ΔML , results in a normal b-value of 1.1, whereas a smaller b value of 0.88 is be obtained if ΔMW = ΔML.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Simão, N.; Goslin, J.; Perrot, J.; Haxel, J.; Dziak, R.
2006-12-01
Acoustic data recorded by two Autonomous Hydrophone Arrays (AHA) were jointly processed in Brest (IUEM) and Newport (PMEL-VENTS) to monitor the seismicity of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR) over a ten month period, at a wide range of spatial scales. Over the deployment period, nearly 6000 T-phase generating earthquakes were localized using a semi-automatic algorithm. Our analysis of the temporal and spatial distribution of these events combined with their acoustic energy source levels provides important insights for the generation mechanisms and characteristic behavior of MAR seismicity. It shows for the AHA catalog a variation of the cumulative number of events with time almost linear. Taking in account the area inside the arrays, the section of the ridge north of the Azores is more seismically active than the southern part of it and the seismic activity occurs in large localized clusters. Our (AHA) catalog of acoustic events was used to compare locations, focal mechanisms and magnitude observations with correlated data from land-based stations of the NEIC global seismic network to establish completeness levels from both within and outside of the hydrophone array. The (AHA) catalog has a Source Level of Completeness (SLc) of 204dB, and a b-value of 0.0605. The NEIC catalog for this region during this period has a Magnitude of Completeness (Mc) of 4.6 and a b-value of 1.01. Regressing the AHA values onto the NEIC derived Mc/b-value relationship suggests a Mc of 3.2 for the AHA catalog. By restricting the events to the region inside the AHA, the NEIC catalog has an Mc of 4.7 with a b-value of 1.09, while the AHA catalog has a SLc of 205dB with a b-value of 0.0753. Comparing the b-values of the NEIC catalog with the AHA catalog, we obtain an improved Mc of 3.0 for the AHA inside the array. A time- and space-dependent Single-Link-Cluster algorithm was applied to the events localized inside the AHA. This allowed us to gather cluster sequences of earthquakes for higher temporal and spatial resolution Mc and b-value computations. The cumulative number of events and time series for several of these clusters were used in a Modified Omori Law simulation. Some of the identified sequences correlated well with a main-shock /aftershock mechanism associated with the older and colder crustal characteristics related to a tectonically dominated MAR regime.
The Herschel Virgo Cluster Survey. XVII. SPIRE point-source catalogs and number counts
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Pappalardo, Ciro; Bendo, George J.; Bianchi, Simone; Hunt, Leslie; Zibetti, Stefano; Corbelli, Edvige; di Serego Alighieri, Sperello; Grossi, Marco; Davies, Jonathan; Baes, Maarten; De Looze, Ilse; Fritz, Jacopo; Pohlen, Michael; Smith, Matthew W. L.; Verstappen, Joris; Boquien, Médéric; Boselli, Alessandro; Cortese, Luca; Hughes, Thomas; Viaene, Sebastien; Bizzocchi, Luca; Clemens, Marcel
2015-01-01
Aims: We present three independent catalogs of point-sources extracted from SPIRE images at 250, 350, and 500 μm, acquired with the Herschel Space Observatory as a part of the Herschel Virgo Cluster Survey (HeViCS). The catalogs have been cross-correlated to consistently extract the photometry at SPIRE wavelengths for each object. Methods: Sources have been detected using an iterative loop. The source positions are determined by estimating the likelihood to be a real source for each peak on the maps, according to the criterion defined in the sourceExtractorSussextractor task. The flux densities are estimated using the sourceExtractorTimeline, a timeline-based point source fitter that also determines the fitting procedure with the width of the Gaussian that best reproduces the source considered. Afterwards, each source is subtracted from the maps, removing a Gaussian function in every position with the full width half maximum equal to that estimated in sourceExtractorTimeline. This procedure improves the robustness of our algorithm in terms of source identification. We calculate the completeness and the flux accuracy by injecting artificial sources in the timeline and estimate the reliability of the catalog using a permutation method. Results: The HeViCS catalogs contain about 52 000, 42 200, and 18 700 sources selected at 250, 350, and 500 μm above 3σ and are ~75%, 62%, and 50% complete at flux densities of 20 mJy at 250, 350, 500 μm, respectively. We then measured source number counts at 250, 350, and 500 μm and compare them with previous data and semi-analytical models. We also cross-correlated the catalogs with the Sloan Digital Sky Survey to investigate the redshift distribution of the nearby sources. From this cross-correlation, we select ~2000 sources with reliable fluxes and a high signal-to-noise ratio, finding an average redshift z ~ 0.3 ± 0.22 and 0.25 (16-84 percentile). Conclusions: The number counts at 250, 350, and 500 μm show an increase in the slope below 200 mJy, indicating a strong evolution in number of density for galaxies at these fluxes. In general, models tend to overpredict the counts at brighter flux densities, underlying the importance of studying the Rayleigh-Jeans part of the spectral energy distribution to refine the theoretical recipes of the models. Our iterative method for source identification allowed the detection of a family of 500 μm sources that are not foreground objects belonging to Virgo and not found in other catalogs. Herschel is an ESA space observatory with science instruments provided by a European-led principal investigator consortia and with an important participation from NASA.The 250, 350, 500 μm, and the total catalogs are only available at the CDS via anonymous ftp to http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr (ftp://130.79.128.5) or via http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr/viz-bin/qcat?J/A+A/573/A129
Improving Data Catalogs with Free and Open Source Software
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Schweitzer, R.; Hankin, S.; O'Brien, K.
2013-12-01
The Global Earth Observation Integrated Data Environment (GEO-IDE) is NOAA's effort to successfully integrate data and information with partners in the national US-Global Earth Observation System (US-GEO) and the international Global Earth Observation System of Systems (GEOSS). As part of the GEO-IDE, the Unified Access Framework (UAF) is working to build momentum towards the goal of increased data integration and interoperability. The UAF project is moving towards this goal with an approach that includes leveraging well known and widely used standards, as well as free and open source software. The UAF project shares the widely held conviction that the use of data standards is a key ingredient necessary to achieve interoperability. Many community-based consensus standards fail, though, due to poor compliance. Compliance problems emerge for many reasons: because the standards evolve through versions, because documentation is ambiguous or because individual data providers find the standard inadequate as-is to meet their special needs. In addition, minimalist use of standards will lead to a compliant service, but one which is of low quality. In this presentation, we will be discussing the UAF effort to build a catalog cleaning tool which is designed to crawl THREDDS catalogs, analyze the data available, and then build a 'clean' catalog of data which is standards compliant and has a uniform set of data access services available. These data services include, among others, OPeNDAP, Web Coverage Service (WCS) and Web Mapping Service (WMS). We will also discuss how we are utilizing free and open source software and services to both crawl, analyze and build the clean data catalog, as well as our efforts to help data providers improve their data catalogs. We'll discuss the use of open source software such as DataNucleus, Thematic Realtime Environmental Distributed Data Services (THREDDS), ncISO and the netCDF Java Common Data Model (CDM). We'll also demonstrate how we are using free services such as Google Charts to create an easily identifiable visual metaphor which describes the quality of data catalogs. Using this rubric, in conjunction with the ncISO metadata quality rubric, will allow data providers to identify non-compliance issues in their data catalogs, thereby improving data availability to their users and to data discovery systems
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-08-08
... minimum of one individual was removed from an unknown location in Arkansas. The bone is perforated at the... as part of the Howe Collection (Catalog number A234). The bone was subsequently assigned Index number...
Sedna Planitia Left Member of a Synthetic Stereo Pair
1998-06-04
This perspective view of Venus, generated by computer from NASA Magellan data and color-coded with emissivity, shows part of the lowland plains in Sedna Planitia. Circular depressions with associated fracture patterns, called coronae. http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA00313
41 CFR 101-30.000 - Scope of part.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-07-01
... items of supply, a prerequisite for integrated item management under the Federal procurement system... Section 101-30.000 Public Contracts and Property Management Federal Property Management Regulations System FEDERAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS SUPPLY AND PROCUREMENT 30-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM § 101-30.000...
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Journal of Chemical Education, 1981
1981-01-01
Presented is the second part of a bibliographic listing of commercially available audiovisual materials for chemistry. Information includes producer (with addresses), catalog number, format (slides, cassettes, filmstrips, films), and price for items in these categories: matter and energy, nuclear chemistry, periodic table, solids and crystals,…
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Multiwavelength catalog in the SEP field (Baronchelli+, 2016)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Baronchelli, I.; Scarlata, C.; Rodighiero, G.; Franceschini, A.; Capak, P. L.; Mei, S.; Vaccari, M.; Marchetti, L.; Hibon, P.; Sedgwick, C.; Pearson, C.; Serjeant, S.; Menendez-Delmestre, K.; Salvato, M.; Malkan, M.; Teplitz, H. I.; Hayes, M.; Colbert, J.; Papovich, C.; Devlin, M.; Kovacs, A.; Scott, K. S.; Surace, J.; Kirkpatrick, J. D.; Atek, H.; Urrutia, T.; Scoville, N. Z.; Takeuchi, T. T.
2016-04-01
Spitzer-IRAC/MIPS Extragalactic survey (SIMES) is a Spitzer Cycle 8 General Observer program (PID 80039, P.I.: Scarlata) observed during the warm mission phase. The survey covers an area of 7.74deg2 to a depth of ~5.80μJy (3σ) at 3.6μm and 5.25μJy at 4.5μm. The field was covered in two visits, between 2011 November 16 and 23, in order to facilitate identification and removal of asteroids. The MIPS 24μm catalog is described in Clements et al. (2011, J/MNRAS/411/373). This catalog covers an area of ~12deg2 in the South Ecliptic Pole (SEP) region and includes counterparts at 70um of the 24um detected sources, and so we limit the analysis to the cross-correlation between IRAC and MIPS 24 and report the 70um association identified in the original MIPS catalog. The SIMES field was observed as part of the Herschel Multi-tiered Extragalactic Survey (HerMES, Oliver et al. 2012, VIII/95; Wang et al. 2014MNRAS.444.2870W). Here, we keep only those sources with fluxes above 3σ in at least one SPIRE band (250, 350 or 500um). A central area of approximately one square degree was observed at the MPG/ESO 2.2m telescope at La Silla with the Wide Field Imager (WFI) during 2010 October (P.I.: T. Takeuchi). Four pointings with the Rc broadband filter (λc=6517.25Å) were obtained, covering a total area of 1.13deg2. (1 data file).
VizieR Online Data Catalog: LAMOST survey of star clusters in M31. II. (Chen+, 2016)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Chen, B.; Liu, X.; Xiang, M.; Yuan, H.; Huang, Y.; Shi, J.; Fan, Z.; Huo, Z.; Wang, C.; Ren, J.; Tian, Z.; Zhang, H.; Liu, G.; Cao, Z.; Zhang, Y.; Hou, Y.; Wang, Y.
2016-09-01
We select a sample of 306 massive star clusters observed with the Large Sky Area Multi-Object Fibre Spectroscopic Telescope (LAMOST) in the vicinity fields of M31 and M33. Massive clusters in our sample are all selected from the catalog presented in Paper I (Chen et al. 2015, Cat. J/other/RAA/15.1392), including five newly discovered clusters selected with the SDSS photometry, three newly confirmed, and 298 previously known clusters from Revised Bologna Catalogue (RBC; Galleti et al. 2012, Cat. V/143; http://www.bo.astro.it/M31/). Since then another two objects, B341 and B207, have also been observed with LAMOST, and they are included in the current analysis. The current sample does not include those listed in Paper I but is selected from Johnson et al. 2012 (Cat. J/ApJ/752/95) since most of them are young but not so massive. All objects are observed with LAMOST between 2011 September and 2014 June. Table1 lists the name, position, and radial velocity of all sample clusters analyzed in the current work. The LAMOST spectra cover the wavelength range 3700-9000Å at a resolving power of R~1800. Details about the observations and data reduction can be found in Paper I. The median signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) per pixel at 4750 and 7450Å of spectra of all clusters in the current sample are, respectively, 14 and 37. Essentially all spectra have S/N(4750Å)>5 except for the spectra of 18 clusters. The latter have S/N(7540Å)>10. Peacock et al. 2010 (Cat. J/MNRAS/402/803) retrieved images of M31 star clusters and candidates from the SDSS archive and extracted ugriz aperture photometric magnitudes from those objects using the SExtractor. They present a catalog containing homogeneous ugriz photometry of 572 star clusters and 373 candidates. Among them, 299 clusters are in our sample. (2 data files).
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Solar analogs and twins rotation by Kepler (do Nascimento+, 2014)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Do Nascimento, J.-D. Jr; Garcia, R. A.; Mathur, S.; Anthony, F.; Barnes, S. A.; Meibom, S.; da Costa, J. S.; Castro, M.; Salabert, D.; Ceillier, T.
2017-03-01
Our sample of 75 stars consists of a seismic sample of 38 from Chaplin et al. (2014, J/ApJS/210/1), 35 additional stars selected from the Kepler Input Catalog (KIC), and 16 Cyg A and B. We selected 38 well-studied stars from the asteroseismic data with fundamental properties, including ages, estimated by Chaplin et al. (2014, J/ApJS/210/1), and with Teff and log g as close as possible to the Sun's value (5200 K < Teff < 6060 K and 3.63 < log g < 4.40). This seismic sample allows a direct comparison between gyro- and seismic-ages for a subset of eight stars. These seismic samples were observed in short cadence for one month each in survey mode. Stellar properties for these stars have been estimated using two global asteroseismic parameters and complementary photometric and spectroscopic observations as described by Chaplin et al. (2014, J/ApJS/210/1). The median final quoted uncertainties for the full Chaplin et al. (2014, J/ApJS/210/1) sample were approximately 0.020 dex in log g and 150 K in Teff. (1 data file).
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Munn, Jeffrey A.; Harris, Hugh C.; von Hippel, Ted; Kilic, Mukremin; Liebert, James W.; Williams, Kurtis A.; DeGennaro, Steven; Jeffery, Elizabeth; Dame, Kyra; Gianninas, A.; Brown, Warren R.
2017-01-01
A catalog of 8472 white dwarf (WD) candidates is presented, selected using reduced proper motions from the deep proper motion catalog of Munn et al. Candidates are selected in the magnitude range 16< r< 21.5 over 980 square degrees, and 16< r< 21.3 over an additional 1276 square degrees, within the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) imaging footprint. Distances, bolometric luminosities, and atmospheric compositions are derived by fitting SDSS ugriz photometry to pure hydrogen and helium model atmospheres (assuming surface gravities {log} {\\text{}}g=8). The disk white dwarf luminosity function (WDLF) is constructed using a sample of 2839 stars with 5.5< {M}{bol}< 17, with statistically significant numbers of stars cooler than the turnover in the luminosity function. The WDLF for the halo is also constructed, using a sample of 135 halo WDs with 5< {M}{bol}< 16. We find space densities of disk and halo WDs in the solar neighborhood of 5.5+/- 0.1× {10}-3 {{pc}}-3 and 3.5+/- 0.7× {10}-5 {{pc}}-3, respectively. We resolve the bump in the disk WDLF due to the onset of fully convective envelopes in WDs, and see indications of it in the halo WDLF as well.
NARROW-LINE X-RAY-SELECTED GALAXIES IN THE CHANDRA -COSMOS FIELD. I. OPTICAL SPECTROSCOPIC CATALOG
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Pons, E.; Watson, M. G.; Elvis, M.
2016-04-20
The COSMOS survey is a large and deep survey with multiwavelength observations of sources from X-rays to the UV, allowing an extensive study of their properties. The central 0.9 deg{sup 2} of the COSMOS field have been observed by Chandra with a sensitivity up to 1.9 × 10{sup −16} erg cm{sup −2} s{sup −1} in the full (0.5–10 keV) band. Photometric and spectroscopic identification of the Chandra -COSMOS (C-COSMOS) sources is available from several catalogs and campaigns. Despite the fact that the C-COSMOS galaxies have a reliable spectroscopic redshift in addition to a spectroscopic classification, the emission-line properties of thismore » sample have not yet been measured. We present here the creation of an emission-line catalog of 453 narrow-line sources from the C-COSMOS spectroscopic sample. We have performed spectral fitting for the more common lines in galaxies ([O ii] λ 3727, [Ne iii] λ 3869, H β , [O iii] λλ 4959, 5007, H α , and [N ii] λλ 6548, 6584). These data provide an optical classification for 151 (i.e., 33%) of the C-COSMOS narrow-line galaxies based on emission-line diagnostic diagrams.« less
VizieR Online Data Catalog: OCARS catalog second version (Malkin, 2016)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Malkin, Z. M.
2016-11-01
Unlike the first version, supported in 2007-2015, the second version of the OCARS catalog includes three files: ocars.txt is the main file containing the source coordinates, source types, redshifts, and approximate magnitudes, together with commentary; this file corresponds to the first version of the OCARS catalog; ocars_m.txt contains photometric data in the 13 uUBgV rRiIzJHK bands; ocars_n.txt contains a table of corresponding source names in various catalogs; currently, only cross-identifications with IVS programs4 and the LQAC catalog [9] are included; The list of objects included in the OCARS catalog is formed from various astrometric and geodeticVLBI programs and catalogs in the following order: - sources in the ICRF2 [2]; - other sources observed in the framework of IVS programs; - sources from the NASA Goddard VLBI group catalog5 ; - sources from the RFC catalog,6 which is the most complete astrometric catalog of radio sources, is updated each quarter, and contributed more than half the OCARS objects; the latest version of OCARS used the RFC-2016a catalog based on observations obtained in 1980-2015 as part of IVS and other radio astrometric programs [19-31]; - sources from the literature. Optical Characteristics of Astrometric Radio Sources (OCARS) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Last revised: 27-NOV-2016 Latest update: - removed 30+ RFC sources not identified in NED and optics - removed rather long detailed statistics table, which seems to be not interested for most of users; it is always available on request - a few additions and amendments E-mail alerts about updates are available on request. URL of this file is http://www.gao.spb.ru/english/as/ac_vlbi/ocars.txt Supplement files: Optical and IR magnitudes: http://www.gao.spb.ru/english/as/acvlbi/ocarsm.txt Cross-identification table: http://www.gao.spb.ru/english/as/acvlbi/ocarsn.txt OCARS catalog in CSV format: http://www.gao.spb.ru/english/as/ac_vlbi/ocars.csv Please send comments and requests to Zinovy Malkin, malkin(at)gao.spb.ru ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- The Second Version of the OCARS Catalog of Optical Characteristics of Astrometric Radio Sources. Astronomy Reports, 2016, Vol. 60, No. 11, pp. 996-1005. DOI: 10.1134/S1063772916110032 If you use OCARS catalog in your work, please cite this publication. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Brief OCARS statistics (detailed statistics is available on request) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Total number of sources 11375 +30...+90 3320 ( 29.2%) -30...+30 6233 ( 54.8%) -90...-30 1822 ( 16.0%) Number of sources with known type 6284 ( 55.2%) AGN 4704 ( 74.9%) quasars 3027 ( 64.3%) BL Lac 992 ( 21.1%) Seyfert 384 ( 8.2%) blazars 89 ( 1.9%) radio galaxies 1580 ( 25.1%) Number of sources with redshift info 5845 ( 51.4%) +30...+90 1803 ( 30.8%) -30...+30 3329 ( 57.0%) -90...-30 713 ( 12.2%) unreliable 868 ( 14.9%) Number of sources with known magnitude 8133 ( 71.5%) +30...+90 2380 ( 29.3%) -30...+30 4481 ( 55.1%) -90...-30 1272 ( 15.6%) Number of sources with both z and magnitude info 5803 ( 51.0%) (3 data files).
A Catalog of Transit Timing Posterior Distributions for all Kepler Planet Candidate Transit Events
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Montet, Benjamin Tyler; Becker, Juliette C.; Johnson, John Asher
2015-12-01
Kepler has ushered in a new era of planetary dynamics, enabling the detection of interactions between multiple planets in transiting systems for hundreds of systems. These interactions, observed as transit timing variations (TTVs), have been used to find non-transiting companions to transiting systems and to measure masses, eccentricities, and inclinations of transiting planets. Often, physical parameters are inferred by comparing the observed light curve to the result of a photodynamical model, a time-intensive process that often ignores the effects of correlated noise in the light curve. Catalogs of transit timing observations have previously neglected non-Gaussian uncertainties in the times of transit, uncertainties in the transit shape, and short cadence data. Here, I present a catalog of not only times of transit centers, but also posterior distributions on the time of transit for every planet candidate transit event in the Kepler data, developed through importance sampling of each transit. This catalog allows one to marginalize over uncertainties in the transit shape and incorporate short cadence data, the effects of correlated noise, and non-Gaussian posteriors. Our catalog will enable dynamical studies that reflect accurately the precision of Kepler and its limitations without requiring the computational power to model the light curve completely with every integration. I will also present our open-source N-body photodynamical modeling code, which integrates planetary and stellar orbits accounting for the effects of GR, tidal effects, and Doppler beaming.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Branchini, Enzo; Camera, Stefano; Cuoco, Alessandro
In this article, we report the detection of a cross-correlation signal between Fermi Large Area Telescope diffuse γ-ray maps and catalogs of clusters. In our analysis, we considered three different catalogs: WHL12, redMaPPer, and PlanckSZ. They all show a positive correlation with different amplitudes, related to the average mass of the objects in each catalog, which also sets the catalog bias. The signal detection is confirmed by the results of a stacking analysis. The cross-correlation signal extends to rather large angular scales, around 1°, that correspond, at the typical redshift of the clusters in these catalogs, to a few tomore » tens of megaparsecs, i.e., the typical scale-length of the large-scale structures in the universe. Most likely this signal is contributed by the cumulative emission from active galactic nuclei (AGNs) associated with the filamentary structures that converge toward the high peaks of the matter density field in which galaxy clusters reside. In addition, our analysis reveals the presence of a second component, more compact in size and compatible with a point-like emission from within individual clusters. At present, we cannot distinguish between the two most likely interpretations for such a signal, i.e., whether it is produced by AGNs inside clusters or if it is a diffuse γ-ray emission from the intracluster medium. Lastly, we argue that this latter, intriguing, hypothesis might be tested by applying this technique to a low-redshift large-mass cluster sample.« less
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Branchini, Enzo; Camera, Stefano; Cuoco, Alessandro
We report the detection of a cross-correlation signal between Fermi Large Area Telescope diffuse γ -ray maps and catalogs of clusters. In our analysis, we considered three different catalogs: WHL12, redMaPPer, and PlanckSZ. They all show a positive correlation with different amplitudes, related to the average mass of the objects in each catalog, which also sets the catalog bias. The signal detection is confirmed by the results of a stacking analysis. The cross-correlation signal extends to rather large angular scales, around 1°, that correspond, at the typical redshift of the clusters in these catalogs, to a few to tens ofmore » megaparsecs, i.e., the typical scale-length of the large-scale structures in the universe. Most likely this signal is contributed by the cumulative emission from active galactic nuclei (AGNs) associated with the filamentary structures that converge toward the high peaks of the matter density field in which galaxy clusters reside. In addition, our analysis reveals the presence of a second component, more compact in size and compatible with a point-like emission from within individual clusters. At present, we cannot distinguish between the two most likely interpretations for such a signal, i.e., whether it is produced by AGNs inside clusters or if it is a diffuse γ -ray emission from the intracluster medium. We argue that this latter, intriguing, hypothesis might be tested by applying this technique to a low-redshift large-mass cluster sample.« less
VizieR Online Data Catalog: GOODS-MUSIC catalog updated version (Santini+, 2009)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Santini, P.; Fontana, A.; Grazian, A.; Salimbeni, S.; Fiore, F.; Fontanot, F.; Boutsia, K.; Castelllano, M.; Cristiani, S.; de Santis, C.; Gallozzi, S.; Giallongo, E.; Nonino, M.; Menci, N.; Paris, D.; Pentericci, L.; Vanzella, E.
2009-06-01
The GOODS-MUSIC multiwavelength catalog provides photometric and spectroscopic information for galaxies in the GOODS Southern field. It includes two U images obtained with the ESO 2.2m telescope and one U band image from VLT-VIMOS, the ACS-HST images in four optical (B,V,i,z) bands, the VLT-ISAAC J, H, and Ks bands as well as the Spitzer images at 3.6, 4.5, 5.8, and 8 micron (IRAC) and 24 micron (MIPS). Most of these images have been made publicly available in the coadded version by the GOODS team, while the U band data were retrieved in raw format and reduced by our team. We also collected all the available spectroscopic information from public spectroscopic surveys and cross-correlated the spectroscopic redshifts with our photometric catalog. For the unobserved fraction of the objects, we applied our photometric redshift code to obtain well-calibrated photometric redshifts. The final catalog is made up of 15208 objects, with 209 known stars and 61 AGNs. The major new feature of this updated release is the inclusion of 24 micron photometry. Further improvements concern a revised photometry in the four IRAC bands (mainly based on the use of new PSF-matching kernerls and on a revised procedure for estimating the background), the enlargement of the sample of galaxies with spectroscopic redshifts, the addition of objects selected on the IRAC 4.5 micron image and a more careful selection of AGN sources. (1 data file).
CPM Pairs from LSPM so far not WDS Listed â Part III
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Knapp, Wilfried; Nanson, John
2017-10-01
The LSPM catalog (Lepine and Shara 2005) is a rich source for CPM pairs we thought already exhausted â but as we found during research for our report âA new concept for counter-checking of assumed CPM pairsâ (Knapp and Nanson 2017) there are still many poten-tial CPM pairs indicated in LSPM which as of the end of 2016 are not listed in the WDS cata-log. After our first two reports on in total about 70 such objects (Knapp and Nanson 2017) the next paper with about 25 additional potential common proper motion pairs is presented here.
PYTHON for Variable Star Astronomy (Abstract)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Craig, M.
2018-06-01
(Abstract only) Open source PYTHON packages that are useful for data reduction, photometry, and other tasks relevant to variable star astronomy have been developed over the last three to four years as part of the Astropy project. Using this software, it is relatively straightforward to reduce images, automatically detect sources, and match them to catalogs. Over the last year browser-based tools for performing some of those tasks have been developed that minimize or eliminate the need to write any of your own code. After providing an overview of the current state of the software, an application that calculates transformation coefficients on a frame-by-frame basis by matching stars in an image to the APASS catalog will be described.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Whalen, D. Joel
2014-01-01
This article, the second in a two-part series, catalogs teaching innovations presented at the 2013 Association for Business Communication Annual Convention, New Orleans. They were presented during the My Favorite Assignment session. The 11 Favorite Assignments featured here offer the reader a variety of learning experiences, including…
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Chiba, Masashi; Beers, Timothy C.
2000-06-01
We present a detailed analysis of the space motions of 1203 solar-neighborhood stars with metal abundances [Fe/H]<=-0.6, on the basis of a catalog, of metal-poor stars selected without kinematic bias recently revised and supplemented by Beers et al. This sample, having available proper motions, radial velocities, and distance estimates for stars with a wide range of metal abundances, is by far the largest such catalog to be assembled to date. We show that the stars in our sample with [Fe/H]<=-2.2, which likely represent a ``pure'' halo component, are characterized by a radially elongated velocity ellipsoid (σU,σV,σW)=(141+/-11, 106+/-9, 94+/-8) km s-1 and small prograde rotation
The Shattered Stereotype: The Academic Library in Technological Transition.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Foster, Constance L.
In academic libraries, neither technical services, public services, nor administration has escaped the impact of online information systems. Online catalogs, network systems, interlibrary lending, database searches, circulation control, automated technical processes, and an increasing number of non-book materials are part of a technological…
2015-06-12
This image of Ceres is part of a sequence taken by NASA Dawn spacecraft on May 22, 2015, from a distance of 3,200 miles 5,100 kilometers with a resolution of 1,600 feet 480 meters per pixel. http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA19567
2015-06-11
This image of Ceres is part of a sequence taken by NASA Dawn spacecraft on May 22, 2015, from a distance of 3,200 miles 5,100 kilometers with a resolution of 1,600 feet 480 meters per pixel. http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA19566
2015-06-10
This image of Ceres is part of a sequence taken by NASA Dawn spacecraft on May 22, 2015, from a distance of 3,200 miles 5,100 kilometers with a resolution of 1,600 feet 480 meters per pixel. http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA19565
2015-06-08
This image of Ceres is part of a sequence taken by NASA Dawn spacecraft on May 22, 2015, from a distance of 3,200 miles 5,100 kilometers with a resolution of 1,600 feet 480 meters per pixel. http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA19563
2015-06-09
This image of Ceres is part of a sequence taken by NASA Dawn spacecraft on May 22, 2015, from a distance of 3,200 miles 5,100 kilometers with a resolution of 1,600 feet 480 meters per pixel. http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA19564
41 CFR 101-30.001 - Applicability.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-07-01
... Section 101-30.001 Public Contracts and Property Management Federal Property Management Regulations System FEDERAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS SUPPLY AND PROCUREMENT 30-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM § 101-30.001 Applicability. The provisions of this part are applicable to all Federal agencies. However, they shall apply to...
41 CFR 101-30.001 - Applicability.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-07-01
... Section 101-30.001 Public Contracts and Property Management Federal Property Management Regulations System FEDERAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS SUPPLY AND PROCUREMENT 30-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM § 101-30.001 Applicability. The provisions of this part are applicable to all Federal agencies. However, they shall apply to...
7 CFR 3401.1 - Applicability of regulations of this part.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-01-01
... Notice in the Federal Register, professional trade journals, agency or program handbooks, the catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance or any other appropriate means, research program areas for which proposals... stations, and colleges, universities, and Federal laboratories having a demonstrable capacity in rangeland...
41 CFR 101-30.001 - Applicability.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-07-01
... Section 101-30.001 Public Contracts and Property Management Federal Property Management Regulations System FEDERAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS SUPPLY AND PROCUREMENT 30-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM § 101-30.001 Applicability. The provisions of this part are applicable to all Federal agencies. However, they shall apply to...
41 CFR 101-30.001 - Applicability.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-07-01
... Section 101-30.001 Public Contracts and Property Management Federal Property Management Regulations System FEDERAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS SUPPLY AND PROCUREMENT 30-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM § 101-30.001 Applicability. The provisions of this part are applicable to all Federal agencies. However, they shall apply to...
7 CFR 3401.1 - Applicability of regulations of this part.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-01-01
... Notice in the Federal Register, professional trade journals, agency or program handbooks, the catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance or any other appropriate means, research program areas for which proposals... stations, and colleges, universities, and Federal laboratories having a demonstrable capacity in rangeland...
7 CFR 3401.1 - Applicability of regulations of this part.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... (CSREES) shall determine and announce, through publication each year of a Notice in the Federal Register, professional trade journals, agency or program handbooks, the catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance or any... universities, State agricultural experiment stations, and colleges, universities, and Federal laboratories...
7 CFR 3401.1 - Applicability of regulations of this part.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-01-01
... Notice in the Federal Register, professional trade journals, agency or program handbooks, the catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance or any other appropriate means, research program areas for which proposals... stations, and colleges, universities, and Federal laboratories having a demonstrable capacity in rangeland...
Magellan Perspective View of Sedna Planitia, 45° N, 350° E
1998-06-04
This perspective view of Venus, generated by computer from NASA Magellan data and color-coded with emissivity, shows part of Sedna Planitia and illustrates a common phenomenon of the lowland plains of Venus. http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA00306
Limits on the fluctuating part of y-type distortion monopole from Planck and SPT results
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Khatri, Rishi; Sunyaev, Rashid
2015-08-01
We use the published Planck and SPT cluster catalogs [1,2] and recently published y-distortion maps [3] to put strong observational limits on the contribution of the fluctuating part of the y-type distortions to the y-distortion monopole. Our bounds are 5.4× 10-8 < langle yrangle < 2.2× 10-6. Our upper bound is a factor of 6.8 stronger than the currently best upper 95% confidence limit from COBE-FIRAS of langle yrangle <15× 10-6. In the standard cosmology, large scale structure is the only source of such distortions and our limits therefore constrain the baryonic physics involved in the formation of the large scale structure. Our lower limit, from the detected clusters in the Planck and SPT catalogs, also implies that a Pixie-like experiment should detect the y-distortion monopole at >27-σ. The biggest sources of uncertainty in our upper limit are the monopole offsets between different HFI channel maps that we estimate to be <10-6.
The Chandra Source Catalog: User Interface
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Bonaventura, Nina; Evans, I. N.; Harbo, P. N.; Rots, A. H.; Tibbetts, M. S.; Van Stone, D. W.; Zografou, P.; Anderson, C. S.; Chen, J. C.; Davis, J. E.; Doe, S. M.; Evans, J. D.; Fabbiano, G.; Galle, E.; Gibbs, D. G.; Glotfelty, K. J.; Grier, J. D.; Hain, R.; Hall, D. M.; He, X.; Houck, J. C.; Karovska, M.; Lauer, J.; McCollough, M. L.; McDowell, J. C.; Miller, J. B.; Mitschang, A. W.; Morgan, D. L.; Nichols, J. S.; Nowak, M. A.; Plummer, D. A.; Primini, F. A.; Refsdal, B. L.; Siemiginowska, A. L.; Sundheim, B. A.; Winkelman, S. L.
2009-01-01
The Chandra Source Catalog (CSC) is the definitive catalog of all X-ray sources detected by Chandra. The CSC is presented to the user in two tables: the Master Chandra Source Table and the Table of Individual Source Observations. Each distinct X-ray source identified in the CSC is represented by a single master source entry and one or more individual source entries. If a source is unaffected by confusion and pile-up in multiple observations, the individual source observations are merged to produce a master source. In each table, a row represents a source, and each column a quantity that is officially part of the catalog. The CSC contains positions and multi-band fluxes for the sources, as well as derived spatial, spectral, and temporal source properties. The CSC also includes associated source region and full-field data products for each source, including images, photon event lists, light curves, and spectra. The master source properties represent the best estimates of the properties of a source, and are presented in the following categories: Position and Position Errors, Source Flags, Source Extent and Errors, Source Fluxes, Source Significance, Spectral Properties, and Source Variability. The CSC Data Access GUI provides direct access to the source properties and data products contained in the catalog. The user may query the catalog database via a web-style search or an SQL command-line query. Each query returns a table of source properties, along with the option to browse and download associated data products. The GUI is designed to run in a web browser with Java version 1.5 or higher, and may be accessed via a link on the CSC website homepage (http://cxc.harvard.edu/csc/). As an alternative to the GUI, the contents of the CSC may be accessed directly through a URL, using the command-line tool, cURL. Support: NASA contract NAS8-03060 (CXC).
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-07-01
... FEDERAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS SUPPLY AND PROCUREMENT 30-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM 30.2-Cataloging... followed by all cataloging activities participating in the Federal Catalog System. (1) Federal Catalog... of a uniform catalog system. (3) Federal Supply Classification (Cataloging Publication H2 Series...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-07-01
... FEDERAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS SUPPLY AND PROCUREMENT 30-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM 30.2-Cataloging... followed by all cataloging activities participating in the Federal Catalog System. (1) Federal Catalog... of a uniform catalog system. (3) Federal Supply Classification (Cataloging Publication H2 Series...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-07-01
... FEDERAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS SUPPLY AND PROCUREMENT 30-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM 30.2-Cataloging... followed by all cataloging activities participating in the Federal Catalog System. (1) Federal Catalog... of a uniform catalog system. (3) Federal Supply Classification (Cataloging Publication H2 Series...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-07-01
... FEDERAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS SUPPLY AND PROCUREMENT 30-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM 30.2-Cataloging... followed by all cataloging activities participating in the Federal Catalog System. (1) Federal Catalog... of a uniform catalog system. (3) Federal Supply Classification (Cataloging Publication H2 Series...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-07-01
... FEDERAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS SUPPLY AND PROCUREMENT 30-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM 30.2-Cataloging... followed by all cataloging activities participating in the Federal Catalog System. (1) Federal Catalog... of a uniform catalog system. (3) Federal Supply Classification (Cataloging Publication H2 Series...
All lesions great and small, part 1: diagnostic cytology in veterinary medicine.
Sharkey, Leslie C; Seelig, Davis M; Overmann, Jed
2014-06-01
Cytopathology is a minimally invasive, rapid, and cost-effective diagnostic modality with broad utilization in veterinary medicine. Primary care clinicians often screen common cutaneous and subcutaneous aspirates, with other samples most frequently evaluated by board certified veterinary clinical pathologists in reference laboratories. Wright-Giemsa stains are frequently utilized with the application of ancillary diagnostics such as cytochemistry, immunocytochemistry, flow cytometry, and molecular diagnostic techniques complicated by the need to develop and validate species specific reagents and protocols. The interpretation of veterinary cytology samples must be undertaken with extensive knowledge of the breadth of animal species, which includes familiarity with the frequency and biological behavior of inflammatory, infectious, and neoplastic lesions that are influenced by species, breed, and husbandry conditions. This review is the first of two parts that focus on the most common domestic companion animal species (dog, cat, and horse), taking an organ system approach to survey important lesions that may be unique to veterinary species or have interesting correlates in human medicine. The first of the two-part series covers skin and subcutaneous tissue, the musculoskeletal system, and lymphoid organs. The cytologic features and biological behavior of similar lesions are compared, and selected molecular mechanisms of disease and ancillary diagnostics are reviewed when characterized. Supporting figures illustrate a subset of lesions. While not a comprehensive catalog of veterinary cytology, the goal is to give cytopathologists working in human medicine a general impression of correlates in veterinary practice. Copyright © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
DES Science Portal: Computing Photometric Redshifts
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Gschwend, Julia
An important challenge facing photometric surveys for cosmological purposes, such as the Dark Energy Survey (DES), is the need to produce reliable photometric redshifts (photo-z). The choice of adequate algorithms and configurations and the maintenance of an up-to-date spectroscopic database to build training sets, for example, are challenging tasks when dealing with large amounts of data that are regularly updated and constantly growing. In this paper, we present the first of a series of tools developed by DES, provided as part of the DES Science Portal, an integrated web-based data portal developed to facilitate the scientific analysis of the data,more » while ensuring the reproducibility of the analysis. We present the DES Science Portal photometric redshift tools, starting from the creation of a spectroscopic sample to training the neural network photo-z codes, to the final estimation of photo-zs for a large photometric catalog. We illustrate this operation by calculating well calibrated photo-zs for a galaxy sample extracted from the DES first year (Y1A1) data. The series of processes mentioned above is run entirely within the Portal environment, which automatically produces validation metrics, and maintains the provenance between the different steps. This system allows us to fine tune the many steps involved in the process of calculating photo-zs, making sure that we do not lose the information on the configurations and inputs of the previous processes. By matching the DES Y1A1 photometry to a spectroscopic sample, we define different training sets that we use to feed the photo-z algorithms already installed at the Portal. Finally, we validate the results under several conditions, including the case of a sample limited to i<22.5 with the color properties close to the full DES Y1A1 photometric data. This way we compare the performance of multiple methods and training configurations. The infrastructure presented here is an effcient way to test several methods of calculating photo-zs and use them to create different catalogs for portal science workflows« less
STT Doubles with Large δM - Part VI: Cygnus Multiples
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Knapp, Wilfried; Nanson, John
2016-10-01
The results of visual double star observing sessions suggested a pattern for STT doubles with large delta_M of being harder to resolve than would be expected based on the WDS catalog data. It was felt this might be a problem with expectations on one hand, and on the other might be an indication of a need for new precise measurements, so we decided to take a closer look at a selected sample of STT doubles and do some research. Of these objects we found three rather complex multiples in Cygnus of special interest so we decided to write a separate report to have more room to include the non STT components as well. Again like for the other objects covered so far several of the components show parameters quite different from the current WDS data.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Theoretical framework for RR Lyrae. II. MIR data (Neeley+, 2017)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Neeley, J. R.; Marengo, M.; Bono, G.; Braga, V. F.; Dall'Ora, M.; Magurno, D.; Marconi, M.; Trueba, N.; Tognelli, E.; Moroni, P. G. P.; Beaton, R. L.; Freedman, W. L.; Madore, B. F.; Monson, A. J.; Scowcroft, V.; Seibert, M.; Stetson, P. B.
2018-01-01
We compiled multi-wavelength observations for a sample of 55 nearby Galactic RRLs. Most of the observations were collected as part of the Carnegie RR Lyrae Program (CRRP, PID 90002), and were published in Monson+ (2017, J/AJ/153/96). See section 3 for further details. For this work, we have also performed new photometry of single-epoch archival observations of M4 from Spitzer's cryogenic mission 5.8 and 8.0um bands. We elected to use the single epoch observation as the estimated mean magnitude with an uncertainty equal to half the amplitude in the 3.6 or 4.5um bands. These results as well as the updated mean magnitudes from Neeley+ (2015, J/ApJ/808/11) are available in Table 7. (6 data files).
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Formamide detection with ASAI-IRAM (Lopez-Sepulcre+, 2015)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lopez-Sepulcre, A.; Jaber, A. A.; Mendoza, E.; Lefloch, B.; Ceccarelli, C.; Vastel, C.; Bachiller, R.; Cernicharo, J.; Codella, C.; Kahane, C.; Kama, M.; Tafalla, M.
2017-11-01
Our source sample consists of 10 well-known pre-stellar and protostellar objects representing different masses and evolutionary states, thus providing a complete view of the various types of objects encountered along the first phases of star formation. The data presented in this work were acquired with the IRAM 30-m telescope near Pico Veleta (Spain) and consist of unbiased spectral surveys at millimetre wavelengths. These are part of the Large Programme ASAI, whose observations and data reduction procedures will be presented in detail in an article by Lefloch & Bachiller (in preparation). Briefly, we gathered the spectral data in several observing runs between 2011 and 2014 using the EMIR receivers at 3 mm (80-116 GHz), 2 mm (129-173 GHz), and 1.3 mm (200-276 GHz). (13 data files).
2012-09-06
This engineering drawing shows the arm on NASA's Curiosity's rover in its "ready-for-action" position, or "ready out" as engineers say, in addition to the position it assumes to drop off samples. http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA16147
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Unidentified gamma-ray sources. IV. X-ray (Paggi+, 2013)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Paggi, A.; Massaro, F.; D'Abrusco, R.; Smith, H. A.; Masetti, N.; Giroletti, M.; Tosti, G.; Funk, S.
2013-11-01
The initial sample considered in our analysis is constituted by the 299 unidentified gamma-ray sources (UGSs) in the 2FGL catalog that do not present any γ-ray analysis flag (Nolan et al. 2012, Cat. J/ApJS/199/31). After Fermi was launched, the Swift XRT Survey of Fermi Unassociated Sources was started in order to perform follow-up observations of the unidentified gamma-ray sources (UGSs) in an attempt to find their potential X-ray counterparts (PI: A. Falcone). We analyze all data collected between the beginning of the follow-up program until 2013 March 31. We note that 203 of the 205 UGSs that constitute our sample have been also observed in the optical and UV by UVOT. We then produced for each X-ray observation the corresponding merged UVOT event files, adopting standard procedures. (6 data files).
OGLE Collection of Star Clusters. New Objects in the Outskirts of the Large Magellanic Cloud
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sitek, M.; Szymański, M. K.; Skowron, D. M.; Udalski, A.; Kostrzewa-Rutkowska, Z.; Skowron, J.; Karczmarek, P.; Cieślar, M.; Wyrzykowski, Ł.; Kozłowski, S.; Pietrukowicz, P.; Soszyński, I.; Mróz, P.; Pawlak, M.; Poleski, R.; Ulaczyk, K.
2016-09-01
The Magellanic System (MS), consisting of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) and the Magellanic Bridge (MBR), contains diverse sample of star clusters. Their spatial distribution, ages and chemical abundances may provide important information about the history of formation of the whole System. We use deep photometric maps derived from the images collected during the fourth phase of the Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment (OGLE-IV) to construct the most complete catalog of star clusters in the Large Magellanic Cloud using the homogeneous photometric data. In this paper we present the collection of star clusters found in the area of about 225 square degrees in the outer regions of the LMC. Our sample contains 679 visually identified star cluster candidates, 226 of which were not listed in any of the previously published catalogs. The new clusters are mainly young small open clusters or clusters similar to associations.
MSX Colors of Radio-Selected HII Regions in the Milky Way
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Giveon, U.; Becker, R. H.; Helfand, D. J.; White, R. L.
2004-12-01
Investigation of the color properties of sources in the MSX catalog reveals two populations - a blue population composed of mainly evolved stars, masers and molecular clouds, and a red population composed mainly HII regions, planetary nebulae, and unclassified radio sources. We compare the MSX catalog to 5 GHz VLA maps of the first quadrant of the Galactic plane (350o
INSTRUCTIONAL MATERIALS CATALOG. (TITLE SUPPLIED).
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
California State Dept. of Education, Sacramento.
COURSES OF INSTRUCTION, WORKBOOKS, TESTBOOKS, AND EXAMINATIONS ARE LISTED FOR AUTO MECHANICS, CABINET MAKING, CARPENTRY, DRYWALL CONSTRUCTION, RADIO SERVICES, AND 30 OTHER AREAS OF APPRENTICE TRAINING. A SYLLABUS FOR TRAINING PART-TIME TRADE AND TECHNICAL TEACHERS IS INCLUDED WITH TECHNICAL EDUCATION MATERIALS. PRICES ARE LISTED FOR ALL MATERIALS.…
Dawn Fields of View of Asteroid Vesta
2007-01-01
This graphic from NASA's Dawn shows fields of view of Dawn instruments from Survey orbit (red), High Altitude Mapping Orbit (green), and Low Altitude Mapping Orbit (blue) and is part of the Mission Art series from NASA's Dawn mission. http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA19371
Marasas’ et al. 1984 toxigenic fusarium species: identity and mycotoxicology revisted
USDA-ARS?s Scientific Manuscript database
Fusarium ranks one of the world’s most economically destructive and taxonomically challenging genera of mycotoxigenic plant pathogens. This is reflected, in part, by the numerous efforts to catalog its taxonomic diversity and mycotoxin potential over the past half century. Given the significant thre...
A study of the cold cores population in the Serpens star-forming region.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Fiorellino, E.; Pezzuto, S.; Liu, S. J.; Benedettini, M.; Schisano, E.; Elia, D.; André, P.; Könyves, V.; Ladjelate, B.; Herschel Gould Belt Survey Consortium
As part of the Herschel Gould Belt survey, the Serpens star-forming region was observed with the Herschel PACS and SPIRE instruments. Data analysis is ongoing and a first version of the source catalog is ready; here we show some preliminary results.
7 CFR 3401.1 - Applicability of regulations of this part.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-01-01
... publication each year of a Notice in the Federal Register, professional trade journals, agency or program handbooks, the catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance or any other appropriate means, research program areas... stations, and colleges, universities, and Federal laboratories having a demonstrable capacity in rangeland...
Women's Studies Collections: A Checklist Evaluation
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Bolton, Brooke A.
2009-01-01
A checklist evaluation on thirty-seven Women's Studies programs conducted using the individual institutions' online public access catalogs (OPACs) is presented. Although Women's Studies collections are very difficult to build, an evaluation of existing programs shows that collections, for the most part, have managed substantial coverage of the…
Metacridamides A and B from the biocontrol fungus metarhizium acridum
USDA-ARS?s Scientific Manuscript database
Metarhizium acridum, an entomopathogenic fungus, has been commercialized and used successfully for biocontrol of grasshopper pests in Africa and Australia. As part of an effort to catalog the secondary metabolites of this fungus we discovered that its conidia produce two novel 17-membered macrocycl...
Outdoor Education. Resource Catalogue.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Manitoba Dept. of Education and Training, Winnipeg.
The material in this catalog has been compiled to serve as a ready reference for teachers to assist them in locating outdoor education materials and obtaining environmental student project assistance available from government departments and private organizations within the province of Manitoba. Part 1 lists agencies that can provide speakers,…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Tennant, Roy, Ed.
This book presents examples of how libraries are using XML (eXtensible Markup Language) to solve problems, expand services, and improve systems. Part I contains papers on using XML in library catalog records: "Updating MARC Records with XMLMARC" (Kevin S. Clarke, Stanford University) and "Searching and Retrieving XML Records via the…
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Richardson, I. G.; von Rosenvinge, T. T.; Cane, H. V.
2013-12-01
The existence of a correlation between the intensity of solar energetic proton (SEP) events and the speed of the associated coronal mass ejection near the Sun is well known, and is often interpreted as evidence for particle acceleration at CME-driven shocks. However, this correlation is far from perfect and might be improved by taking other parameters into consideration (e.g., CME width). In studies of cycle 23 SEP events, values of CME speed, width and other parameters were typically taken from the CDAWWeb LASCO CME catalog. This is compiled 'by hand' from examination of LASCO images by experienced observers. Other automated LASCO CME catalogs have now been developed, e.g., CACTUS (Royal Observatory of Belgium) and SEEDS (George Mason University), but the basic CME parameters do not always agree with those from the CDAWweb catalog since they are not determined in the same way. For example the 'CME speed' might be measured at a specific position angle against the plane of the sky in one catalog, or be the average of speeds taken along the CME front in another. Speeds may also be based on linear or higher order fits to the coronagraph images. There will also be projection effects in these plane of the sky speeds. Similarly, CME widths can vary between catalogs and are dependent on how they are defined. For example, the CDAW catalog lists any CME that surrounds the occulting disk as a 'halo' (360 deg. width) CME even though the CME may be highly-asymmetric and originate from a solar event far from central meridian. Another catalog may give a smaller width for the same CME. The problem of obtaining the 'true' CME width is especially acute for assessing the relationship between CME width and SEP properties when using the CDAW catalog since a significant fraction, if not the majority, of the CMEs associated with major SEP events are reported to be halo CMEs. In principle, observations of CMEs from the STEREO A and B spacecraft, launched in late 2006, might be used to overcome some of these problems. In particular, a spacecraft in quadrature with the solar source of an SEP event should observe the 'true' width and speed of the associated CME. However, STEREO CME parameters are derived using the CACTUS method, and cannot be directly compared with the LASCO CDAW catalog values that have been so widely used for many years. In this study, we will examine the relationship between the properties of CMEs in various catalogs and the intensities of a large sample of particle events that include ˜25 MeV protons in cycles 23 and 24. In particular, we will compare the proton intensity-speed relationships obtained using the CDAW, CACTUS and SEEDS LASCO catalogs, and also using the CACTUS values from whichever spacecraft (STEREO A, B or SOHO) is best in quadrature with the solar event. We will also examine whether there is any correlation between the width of the CMEs in the automated catalogs and proton intensity, and whether a combination of CME speed and width might improve the correlation with proton intensity.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
1973-01-01
The ALERT program, a system for communicating common problems with parts, materials, and processes, is condensed and catalogued. Expanded information on selected topics is provided by relating the problem area (failure) to the cause, the investigations and findings, the suggestions for avoidance (inspections, screening tests, proper part applications), and failure analysis procedures. The basic objective of ALERT is the avoidance of the recurrence of parts, materials, and processed problems, thus improving the reliability of equipment produced for and used by the government.
Comparison of the NCI open database with seven large chemical structural databases.
Voigt, J H; Bienfait, B; Wang, S; Nicklaus, M C
2001-01-01
Eight large chemical databases have been analyzed and compared to each other. Central to this comparison is the open National Cancer Institute (NCI) database, consisting of approximately 250 000 structures. The other databases analyzed are the Available Chemicals Directory ("ACD," from MDL, release 1.99, 3D-version); the ChemACX ("ACX," from CamSoft, Version 4.5); the Maybridge Catalog and the Asinex database (both as distributed by CamSoft as part of ChemInfo 4.5); the Sigma-Aldrich Catalog (CD-ROM, 1999 Version); the World Drug Index ("WDI," Derwent, version 1999.03); and the organic part of the Cambridge Crystallographic Database ("CSD," from Cambridge Crystallographic Data Center, 1999 Version 5.18). The database properties analyzed are internal duplication rates; compounds unique to each database; cumulative occurrence of compounds in an increasing number of databases; overlap of identical compounds between two databases; similarity overlap; diversity; and others. The crystallographic database CSD and the WDI show somewhat less overlap with the other databases than those with each other. In particular the collections of commercial compounds and compilations of vendor catalogs have a substantial degree of overlap among each other. Still, no database is completely a subset of any other, and each appears to have its own niche and thus "raison d'être". The NCI database has by far the highest number of compounds that are unique to it. Approximately 200 000 of the NCI structures were not found in any of the other analyzed databases.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: 340GHz SMA obs. of 50 nearby protoplanetary disks (Tripathi+, 2017)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Tripathi, A.; Andrews, S. M.; Birnstiel, T.; Wilner, D. J.
2018-03-01
A sample of 50 nearby (d<=200pc) disk targets was collated from the archived catalog of ~340GHz (880um) continuum measurements made with the Submillimeter Array (SMA), since the start of science operations in 2004. Of the 50 disks in our survey, 10 were recently observed by us expressly for the purposes of the present study. To our knowledge, the SMA observations of 18 targets have not yet been published elsewhere. Table 1 is a brief SMA observation log, with references for where the data originally appeared (observations span 2005 jun 12 to 2015 Jan 19). (3 data files).
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Mullally, Fergal
2017-01-01
We present an automated method of identifying background eclipsing binaries masquerading as planet candidates in the Kepler planet candidate catalogs. We codify the manual vetting process for Kepler Objects of Interest (KOIs) described in Bryson et al. (2013) with a series of measurements and tests that can be performed algorithmically. We compare our automated results with a sample of manually vetted KOIs from the catalog of Burke et al. (2014) and find excellent agreement. We test the performance on a set of simulated transits and find our algorithm correctly identifies simulated false positives approximately 50 of the time, and correctly identifies 99 of simulated planet candidates.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Paisley, William; Butler, Matilda
This study of the computer/user interface investigated the role of the computer in performing information tasks that users now perform without computer assistance. Users' perceptual/cognitive processes are to be accelerated or augmented by the computer; a long term goal is to delegate information tasks entirely to the computer. Cybernetic and…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
New York State Education Dept., Albany. Office of Postsecondary Research, Information Systems, and Institutional Aid.
Descriptions of New York State and federal student financial aid programs as of November 1981 are presented for use by postsecondary institutions in compliance with part 53 of the Regulations of the Commissioner of Education. These descriptions may be used in the preparation of catalogs or bulletins and include information of application…
New UV-source catalogs, UV spectral database, UV variables and science tools from the GALEX surveys
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Bianchi, Luciana; de la Vega, Alexander; Shiao, Bernard; Bohlin, Ralph
2018-03-01
We present a new, expanded and improved catalog of Ultraviolet (UV) sources from the GALEX All-Sky Imaging survey: GUVcat_AIS (Bianchi et al. in Astrophys. J. Suppl. Ser. 230:24, 2017). The catalog includes 83 million unique sources (duplicate measurements and rim artifacts are removed) measured in far-UV and near-UV. With respect to previous versions (Bianchi et al. in Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc. 411:2770 2011a, Adv. Space Res. 53:900-991, 2014), GUVcat_AIS covers a slightly larger area, 24,790 square degrees, and includes critical corrections and improvements, as well as new tags, in particular to identify sources in the footprint of extended objects, where pipeline source detection may fail and custom-photometry may be necessary. The UV unique-source catalog facilitates studies of density of sources, and matching of the UV samples with databases at other wavelengths. We also present first results from two ongoing projects, addressing respectively UV variability searches on time scales from seconds to years by mining the GALEX photon archive, and the construction of a database of ˜120,000 GALEX UV spectra (range ˜1300-3000 Å), including quality and calibration assessment and classification of the grism, hence serendipitous, spectral sources.
The Next Generation Virgo Cluster Survey. XX. RedGOLD Background Galaxy Cluster Detections
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Licitra, Rossella; Mei, Simona; Raichoor, Anand; Erben, Thomas; Hildebrandt, Hendrik; Muñoz, Roberto P.; Van Waerbeke, Ludovic; Côté, Patrick; Cuillandre, Jean-Charles; Duc, Pierre-Alain; Ferrarese, Laura; Gwyn, Stephen D. J.; Huertas-Company, Marc; Lançon, Ariane; Parroni, Carolina; Puzia, Thomas H.
2016-09-01
We build a background cluster candidate catalog from the Next Generation Virgo Cluster Survey (NGVS) using our detection algorithm RedGOLD. The NGVS covers 104 deg2 of the Virgo cluster in the {u}* ,g,r,I,z-bandpasses to a depth of g ˜ 25.7 mag (5σ). Part of the survey was not covered or has shallow observations in the r band. We build two cluster catalogs: one using all bandpasses, for the fields with deep r-band observations (˜20 deg2), and the other using four bandpasses ({u}* ,g,I,z) for the entire NGVS area. Based on our previous Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope Legacy Survey W1 studies, we estimate that both of our catalogs are ˜100% (˜70%) complete and ˜80% pure, at z ≤ 0.6 (z ≲ 1), for galaxy clusters with masses of M ≳ 1014 M ⊙. We show that when using four bandpasses, though the photometric redshift accuracy is lower, RedGOLD detects massive galaxy clusters up to z ˜ 1 with completeness and purity similar to the five-band case. This is achieved when taking into account the bias in the richness estimation, which is ˜40% lower at 0.5 ≤ z < 0.6 and ˜20% higher at 0.6 < z < 0.8, with respect to the five-band case. RedGOLD recovers all the X-ray clusters in the area with mass M 500 > 1.4 × 1014 M ⊙ and 0.08 < z < 0.5. Because of our different cluster richness limits and the NGVS depth, our catalogs reach lower masses than the published redMaPPer cluster catalog over the area, and we recover ˜90%-100% of its detections.
Albedos of Centaurs, Jovian Trojans and Hildas
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Romanishin, William
2017-01-01
I present optical V band albedo distributions for samples of outer solar system minor bodies including Centaurs, Jovian Trojans and Hildas. Diameters come almost entirely from the NEOWISE catalog (Mainzer etal 2016- Planetary Data System). Optical photometry (H values) for about 2/3 of the approximately 2700 objects studied are from PanStarrrs (Veres et al 2015 Icarus 261, 34). The PanStarrs optical photometry is supplemented by H values from JPL Horizons (corrected to be on the same photometric system as the PanStarrs data) for the objects in the NEOWISE catalog that are not in the PanStarrs catalog. I compare the albedo distributions of various pairs of subsamples using the nonparametric Wilcoxon rank sum test. Examples of potentially interesting comparisons include: (1) the median L5 Trojan cloud albedo is about 10% darker than that of the L4 cloud at a high level of statistical significance and (2) the median albedo of the gray Centaurs lies between that of the L4 and L5 Trojan groups.
Bias of damped Lyman-α systems from their cross-correlation with CMB lensing
Alonso, D.; Colosimo, J.; Font-Ribera, A.; ...
2018-04-20
We cross-correlate the positions of damped Lyman-α systems (DLAs) and their parent quasar catalog with a convergence map derived from the Planck cosmic microwave background (CMB) temperature data. We then make consistent measurements of the lensing signal of both samples in both Fourier and configuration space. By interpreting the excess signal present in the DLA catalog with respect to the parent quasar catalog as caused by the large scale structure traced by DLAs, we are able to infer the bias of these objects: b DLA=2.6±0.9. These results are consistent with previous measurements made in cross-correlation with the Lyman-α forest, althoughmore » the current noise in the lensing data and the low number density of DLAs limits the constraining power of this measurement. We discuss the robustness of the analysis with respect to a number different systematic effects and forecast prospects of carrying out this measurement with data from future experiments.« less
Bias of damped Lyman-α systems from their cross-correlation with CMB lensing
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Alonso, D.; Colosimo, J.; Font-Ribera, A.
We cross-correlate the positions of damped Lyman-α systems (DLAs) and their parent quasar catalog with a convergence map derived from the Planck cosmic microwave background (CMB) temperature data. We then make consistent measurements of the lensing signal of both samples in both Fourier and configuration space. By interpreting the excess signal present in the DLA catalog with respect to the parent quasar catalog as caused by the large scale structure traced by DLAs, we are able to infer the bias of these objects: b DLA=2.6±0.9. These results are consistent with previous measurements made in cross-correlation with the Lyman-α forest, althoughmore » the current noise in the lensing data and the low number density of DLAs limits the constraining power of this measurement. We discuss the robustness of the analysis with respect to a number different systematic effects and forecast prospects of carrying out this measurement with data from future experiments.« less
Bias of damped Lyman-α systems from their cross-correlation with CMB lensing
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Alonso, D.; Colosimo, J.; Font-Ribera, A.; Slosar, A.
2018-04-01
We cross-correlate the positions of damped Lyman-α systems (DLAs) and their parent quasar catalog with a convergence map derived from the Planck cosmic microwave background (CMB) temperature data. We make consistent measurements of the lensing signal of both samples in both Fourier and configuration space. By interpreting the excess signal present in the DLA catalog with respect to the parent quasar catalog as caused by the large scale structure traced by DLAs, we are able to infer the bias of these objects: bDLA=2.6±0.9. These results are consistent with previous measurements made in cross-correlation with the Lyman-α forest, although the current noise in the lensing data and the low number density of DLAs limits the constraining power of this measurement. We discuss the robustness of the analysis with respect to a number different systematic effects and forecast prospects of carrying out this measurement with data from future experiments.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
J. Daniel Arthur
In recent years, rising populations and regional droughts have caused coal-fired power plants to temporarily curtail or cease production due to a lack of available water for cooling. In addition, concerns about the availability of adequate supplies of cooling water have resulted in cancellation of plans to build much-needed new power plants. These issues, coupled with concern over the possible impacts of global climate change, have caused industry and community planners to seek alternate sources of water to supplement or replace existing supplies. The Department of Energy, through the National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL) is researching ways to reduce themore » water demands of coal-fired power plants. As part of the NETL Program, ALL Consulting developed an internet-based Catalog of potential alternative sources of cooling water. The Catalog identifies alternative sources of water, such as mine discharge water, oil and gas produced water, saline aquifers, and publicly owned treatment works (POTWs), which could be used to supplement or replace existing surface water sources. This report provides an overview of the Catalog, and examines the benefits and challenges of using these alternative water sources for cooling water.« less
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Bernhard, Ronald P.; Zolensky, Michael E.
1994-01-01
The Long Duration Exposure Facility (LDEF) was placed in low-Earth orbit (LEO) in 1984 and recovered 5.7 years later. The LDEF was host to several individual experiments specifically designed to characterize critical aspects of meteoroid and debris environment in LEO. However, it was realized from the beginning that the most efficient use of the satellite would be to examine the entire surface for impact features. In this regard, particular interest centered on common exposed materials that faced in all LDEF pointing directions. Among the most important of these materials was the tray clamps. Therefore, in an effort to better understand the nature of particulates in LEO and their effects on spacecraft hardware, residues found in impact features on LDEF tray clamp surfaces are being analyzed. This catalog presents all data from clamps from Bay B of the LDEF. NASA Technical Memorandum 104759 has cataloged impacts that occurred on Bay B (published March 1993). Subsequent catalogs will include clamps from succeeding bays of the satellite.
SPLASH-SXDF Multi-wavelength Photometric Catalog
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Mehta, Vihang; Scarlata, Claudia; Capak, Peter; Davidzon, Iary; Faisst, Andreas; Hsieh, Bau Ching; Ilbert, Olivier; Jarvis, Matt; Laigle, Clotilde; Phillips, John; Silverman, John; Strauss, Michael A.; Tanaka, Masayuki; Bowler, Rebecca; Coupon, Jean; Foucaud, Sébastien; Hemmati, Shoubaneh; Masters, Daniel; McCracken, Henry Joy; Mobasher, Bahram; Ouchi, Masami; Shibuya, Takatoshi; Wang, Wei-Hao
2018-04-01
We present a multi-wavelength catalog in the Subaru/XMM-Newton Deep Field (SXDF) as part of the Spitzer Large Area Survey with Hyper-Suprime-Cam (SPLASH). We include the newly acquired optical data from the Hyper-Suprime-Cam Subaru Strategic Program, accompanied by IRAC coverage from the SPLASH survey. All available optical and near-infrared data is homogenized and resampled on a common astrometric reference frame. Source detection is done using a multi-wavelength detection image including the u-band to recover the bluest objects. We measure multi-wavelength photometry and compute photometric redshifts as well as physical properties for ∼1.17 million objects over ∼4.2 deg2, with ∼800,000 objects in the 2.4 deg2 HSC-Ultra-Deep coverage. Using the available spectroscopic redshifts from various surveys over the range of 0 < z < 6, we verify the performance of the photometric redshifts and we find a normalized median absolute deviation of 0.023 and outlier fraction of 3.2%. The SPLASH-SXDF catalog is a valuable, publicly available resource, perfectly suited for studying galaxies in the early universe and tracing their evolution through cosmic time.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Orbits based on SOAR speckle interferometry. II. (Tokovinin, 2017)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Tokovinin, A.
2018-01-01
We present new or updated orbits of 44 binary systems or subsystems. It is based on speckle interferometric measurements made at the 4.1m Southern Astrophysical Research (SOAR) telescope (Tokovinin et al. 2010, Cat. J/AJ/139/743; 2014, Cat. J/AJ/147/123; 2015, Cat. J/AJ/150/50; 2016, Cat. J/AJ/151/153; 2010PASP..122.1483T; Tokovinin 2012, Cat. J/AJ/144/56) combined with archival data collected in the Washington Double Star Catalog (WDS; Mason et al. 2001-2014, Cat. B/wds). It continues previous work on binary orbits resulting from the SOAR speckle program and follows the template of the Paper I (Tokovinin 2016, Cat. J/AJ/152/138), where the motivation is discussed. Briefly, the calculation of binary orbits is part of the astronomical infrastructure, and visual orbital elements are used in many areas. The state of the art is reflected in the Sixth Catalog of Visual Binary Orbits (VB6; Hartkopf et al. 2001AJ....122.3472H; http://www.usno.navy.mil/USNO/astrometry/optical-IR-prod/wds/orb6.html). (5 data files).
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Tori in AGNs through Spitzer/IRS spectra (Gonzalez-Martin+, 2017)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gonzalez-Martin, O.; Masegosa, J.; Hernan-Caballero, A.; Marquez, I.; Almeida, C. R.; Alonso-Herrero, A.; Aretxaga, I.; Rodriguez-Espinosa, J. M.; Acosta-Pulido, J. A.; Hernandez-Garcia, L.; Esparza-Arredondo, D.; Martinez-Paredes, M.; Bonfini, P.; Pasetto, A.; Dultzin, D.
2018-01-01
The sample was originally presented by Gonzalez-Martin+ (2015, J/A+A/578/A74). The LINER sample is selected as those objects with reported X-ray luminosities from Gonzalez-Martin+ (2009A&A...506.1107G) with full coverage of the 5-30um range with the InfraRed Spectrograph (Spitzer/IRS) spectra. This guarantees that all of the LINERs have LX(2-10keV) measurements. Among the 48 LINERs with Spitzer/IRS spectra, 40 mid-infrared spectra were taken from the CASSIS atlas (Lebouteiller+ 2011ApJS..196....8L) and 8 from the SINGS database (Kennicutt+ 2003PASP..115..928K). We have included in our analysis mid-infrared spatially resolved images taken with CanariCam/GTC using the filter "Si6" centered at 11.5um. These observations are part of proprietary data of a sample of faint and Compton-thick LINERs observed with CanariCam/GTC (proposal ID GTC10-14A, P.I. Gonzalez-Martin). The summary of the observations used in this paper is reported in Table 4. See section 3.2 for further explanations. (5 data files).
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Bellini, A.; Anderson, J.; Van der Marel, R. P.
We present the first study of high-precision internal proper motions (PMs) in a large sample of globular clusters, based on Hubble Space Telescope (HST) data obtained over the past decade with the ACS/WFC, ACS/HRC, and WFC3/UVIS instruments. We determine PMs for over 1.3 million stars in the central regions of 22 clusters, with a median number of ∼60,000 stars per cluster. These PMs have the potential to significantly advance our understanding of the internal kinematics of globular clusters by extending past line-of-sight (LOS) velocity measurements to two- or three-dimensional velocities, lower stellar masses, and larger sample sizes. We describe themore » reduction pipeline that we developed to derive homogeneous PMs from the very heterogeneous archival data. We demonstrate the quality of the measurements through extensive Monte Carlo simulations. We also discuss the PM errors introduced by various systematic effects and the techniques that we have developed to correct or remove them to the extent possible. We provide in electronic form the catalog for NGC 7078 (M 15), which consists of 77,837 stars in the central 2.'4. We validate the catalog by comparison with existing PM measurements and LOS velocities and use it to study the dependence of the velocity dispersion on radius, stellar magnitude (or mass) along the main sequence, and direction in the plane of the sky (radial or tangential). Subsequent papers in this series will explore a range of applications in globular-cluster science and will also present the PM catalogs for the other sample clusters.« less
A Catalog Sample of Low-mass Galaxies Observed in X-Rays with Central Candidate Black Holes
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Nucita, A. A.; Manni, L.; Paolis, F. De
We present a sample of X-ray-selected candidate black holes in 51 low-mass galaxies with z ≤ 0.055 and masses up to 10{sup 10} M {sub ⊙} obtained by cross-correlating the NASA-SLOAN Atlas with the 3XMM catalog. We have also searched in the available catalogs for radio counterparts of the black hole candidates and find that 19 of the previously selected sources also have a radio counterpart. Our results show that about 37% of the galaxies of our sample host an X-ray source (associated with a radio counterpart) spatially coincident with the galaxy center, in agreement with other recent works. Formore » these nuclear sources, the X-ray/radio fundamental plane relation allows one to estimate the mass of the (central) candidate black holes, which are in the range of 10{sup 4}–2 × 10{sup 8} M {sub ⊙} (with a median value of ≃3 × 10{sup 7} M {sub ⊙} and eight candidates having masses below 10{sup 7} M {sub ⊙}). This result, while suggesting that X-ray emitting black holes in low-mass galaxies may have had a key role in the evolution of such systems, makes it even more urgent to explain how such massive objects formed in galaxies. Of course, dedicated follow-up observations both in the X-ray and radio bands, as well as in the optical, are necessary in order to confirm our results.« less
Astronomical Data Center Bulletin, volume 1, number 2
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Nagy, T. A.; Warren, W. H., Jr.; Mead, J. M.
1981-01-01
Work in progress on astronomical catalogs is presented in 16 papers. Topics cover astronomical data center operations; automatic astronomical data retrieval at GSFC; interactive computer reference search of astronomical literature 1950-1976; formatting, checking, and documenting machine-readable catalogs; interactive catalog of UV, optical, and HI data for 201 Virgo cluster galaxies; machine-readable version of the general catalog of variable stars, third edition; galactic latitude and magnitude distribution of two astronomical catalogs; the catalog of open star clusters; infrared astronomical data base and catalog of infrared observations; the Air Force geophysics laboratory; revised magnetic tape of the N30 catalog of 5,268 standard stars; positional correlation of the two-micron sky survey and Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory catalog sources; search capabilities for the catalog of stellar identifications (CSI) 1979 version; CSI statistics: blue magnitude versus spectral type; catalogs available from the Astronomical Data Center; and status report on machine-readable astronomical catalogs.
Jonckheere Double Star Photometry â Part VIII: Sextans
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Knapp, Wilfried
2018-01-01
If any double star discoverer is in urgent need of photometry then it is Jonckheere. There are over 3000 Jonckheere objects listed in the WDS catalog and a good part of them with magnitudes obviously far too bright. This report covers the Jonckheere objects in the constellation Sextans. One image per object was taken with V-filter to allow for visual magnitude measurement by differential photometry. All objects were additionally checked for common proper motion and a good part of the objects qualify indeed as potential CPM pairs.
Cataloging Practices in India: Efforts for Standardization.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Tikku, Upinder Kumar
1984-01-01
Surveys current cataloging practices in Indian libraries and discusses standardization in cataloging, types of catalogs, cataloging codes (Anglo-American and Ranganathan), subject headings, descriptive cataloging, and standardization efforts (international, United States, USSR, Great Britain, India). Footnotes are included. (EJS)
2016-09-21
This VIS image shows part of the South Polar cap. In this region the surface has numerous circular depressions, which give the appearance of a slice of swiss cheese. Orbit Number: 64848 Latitude: -86.7725 Longitude: 355.096 Instrument: VIS Captured: 2016-07-27 09:35 http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA20993
2016-10-19
This image of the sunlit part of Jupiter and its swirling atmosphere was created by a citizen scientist (Alex Mai) using data from Juno's JunoCam instrument. JunoCam's raw images are available at www.missionjuno.swri.edu/junocam for the public to peruse and process into image products. http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA21108
Project Operation Index: An Approach to Content Analysis and Indexing of Videotapes.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Ontario Educational Communications Authority, Toronto. Research and Planning Branch.
Three projects, each covering certain selected aspects of a potential information storage and retrieval system, were part of a study by the Ontario Educational Communications Authority (OECA) to explore various means for extending the usefulness of audiovisual materials. Project Dataset began the collection, classification, and cataloging of…
Management Preparation and Training of Department Heads in ARL Libraries.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Wittenbach, Stefanie A.; And Others
1992-01-01
A survey of cataloging and reference department heads in ARL (Association for Research Libraries) member libraries showed that both professional experience and management coursework play a part in a librarian's promotion to department head. It is suggested that library management will improve if libraries require formal management preparation and…
Western Mountain Initiative - News & Media
. [Fountain] Iceland Television. Hofn, Iceland. Interview on climate change and effects of glaciers, June part of plant growth. But in excess, reactive nitrogen leads to adverse effects, causing nutrient the catalog of effects wrought by global warming. "There aren't very many places where you can
48 CFR 46.203 - Criteria for use of contract quality requirements.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-10-01
... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 1 2012-10-01 2012-10-01 false Criteria for use of contract quality requirements. 46.203 Section 46.203 Federal Acquisition Regulations System FEDERAL...) Commercial (described in commercial catalogs, drawings, or industrial standards; see part 2); or (2) Military...
48 CFR 46.203 - Criteria for use of contract quality requirements.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-10-01
... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 1 2013-10-01 2013-10-01 false Criteria for use of contract quality requirements. 46.203 Section 46.203 Federal Acquisition Regulations System FEDERAL...) Commercial (described in commercial catalogs, drawings, or industrial standards; see part 2); or (2) Military...
2 CFR 215.12 - Forms for applying for Federal assistance.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-01-01
... be obtained from the Federal awarding agency or the Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance. The SPOC...) Federal awarding agencies shall comply with the applicable report clearance requirements of 5 CFR part... shall use the SF-424 series or those forms and instructions prescribed by the Federal awarding agency...
31 CFR 205.2 - What definitions apply to this part?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-07-01
... writing. Business day means a day when Federal Reserve Banks are open. Catalog of Federal Domestic... non-financial Federal assistance programs administered by agencies of the Federal government... Federal Program Agency is authorized by law to exercise judgment in awarding a grant and in selecting a...
48 CFR 46.203 - Criteria for use of contract quality requirements.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-10-01
... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 1 2014-10-01 2014-10-01 false Criteria for use of contract quality requirements. 46.203 Section 46.203 Federal Acquisition Regulations System FEDERAL...) Commercial (described in commercial catalogs, drawings, or industrial standards; see part 2); or (2) Military...
31 CFR 205.2 - What definitions apply to this part?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-07-01
... writing. Business day means a day when Federal Reserve Banks are open. Catalog of Federal Domestic... non-financial Federal assistance programs administered by agencies of the Federal government... Federal Program Agency is authorized by law to exercise judgment in awarding a grant and in selecting a...
48 CFR 46.203 - Criteria for use of contract quality requirements.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 1 2010-10-01 2010-10-01 false Criteria for use of contract quality requirements. 46.203 Section 46.203 Federal Acquisition Regulations System FEDERAL...) Commercial (described in commercial catalogs, drawings, or industrial standards; see part 2); or (2) Military...
31 CFR 205.2 - What definitions apply to this part?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-07-01
... writing. Business day means a day when Federal Reserve Banks are open. Catalog of Federal Domestic... non-financial Federal assistance programs administered by agencies of the Federal government... Federal Program Agency is authorized by law to exercise judgment in awarding a grant and in selecting a...
2 CFR 215.12 - Forms for applying for Federal assistance.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-01-01
... be obtained from the Federal awarding agency or the Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance. The SPOC...) Federal awarding agencies shall comply with the applicable report clearance requirements of 5 CFR part... shall use the SF-424 series or those forms and instructions prescribed by the Federal awarding agency...
48 CFR 46.203 - Criteria for use of contract quality requirements.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 1 2011-10-01 2011-10-01 false Criteria for use of contract quality requirements. 46.203 Section 46.203 Federal Acquisition Regulations System FEDERAL...) Commercial (described in commercial catalogs, drawings, or industrial standards; see part 2); or (2) Military...
2 CFR 215.12 - Forms for applying for Federal assistance.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-01-01
... be obtained from the Federal awarding agency or the Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance. The SPOC...) Federal awarding agencies shall comply with the applicable report clearance requirements of 5 CFR part... shall use the SF-424 series or those forms and instructions prescribed by the Federal awarding agency...
31 CFR 205.2 - What definitions apply to this part?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-07-01
... writing. Business day means a day when Federal Reserve Banks are open. Catalog of Federal Domestic... non-financial Federal assistance programs administered by agencies of the Federal government... Federal Program Agency is authorized by law to exercise judgment in awarding a grant and in selecting a...
College and University Mergers: Impact on Academic Libraries in China.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Huang, Hong-Wei
2000-01-01
Discussion of mergers in China between individual colleges and universities and much larger universities that have been a part of China's higher education reform focuses on the influence on academic libraries. Topics include collections; acquisitions; staffing; services; funding; resource sharing; library administration; online cataloging systems;…
Magellan Perspective View of Ovda Regio, 15° N, 77° E
1998-06-04
This perspective view of Venus, generated by computer from NASA Magellan data and color-coded with emissivity, shows part of the lowlands to the north of Ovda Regio. The prominent topographic feature is a shield volcano. http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA00308
78 FR 5755 - Change in Terminology: “Mental Retardation” to “Intellectual Disability”
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2013-01-28
... SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION 20 CFR Parts 404 and 416 [Docket No. SSA-2012-0066] RIN 0960-AH52 Change in Terminology: ``Mental Retardation'' to ``Intellectual Disability'' AGENCY: Social Security... non- substantive change requests. (Catalog of Federal Domestic Program Nos. 96.001, Social Security...
VizieR Online Data Catalog: 1Jy northern AGN sample (Planck+, 2016)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Planck Collaboration; Ade, P. A. R.; Aghanim, N.; Aller, H. D.; Aller, M. F.; Arnaud, M.; Aumont, J.; Baccigalupi, C.; Banday, A. J.; Barreiro, R. B.; Bartolo, N.; Battaner, E.; Benabed, K.; Benoit-Levy, A.; Bernard, J.-P.; Bersanelli, M.; Bielewicz, P.; Bonaldi, A.; Bonavera, L.; Bond, J. R.; Borrill, J.; Bouchet, F. R.; Burigana, C.; Calabrese, E.; Catalano, A.; Chiang, H. C.; Christensen, P. R.; Clements, D. L.; Colombo, L. P. L.; Couchot, F.; Crill, B. P.; Curto, A.; Cuttaia, F.; Danese, L.; Davies, R. D.; Davis, R. J.; de Bernardis, P.; De Rosa, A.; de Zotti, G.; Delabrouille, J.; Dickinson, C.; Diego, J. M.; Dole, H.; Donzelli, S.; Dore, O.; Ducout, A.; Dupac, X.; Efstathiou, G.; Elsner, F.; Eriksen, H. K.; Finelli, F.; Forni, O.; Frailis, M.; Fraisse, A. A.; Franceschi, E.; Galeotta, S.; Galli, S.; Ganga, K.; Giard, M.; Giraud-Heraud, Y.; Gjerlow, E.; Gonzalez-Nuevo, J.; Gorski, K. M.; Gruppuso, A.; Gurwell, M. A.; Hansen, F. K.; Harrison, D. L.; Henrot-Versille, S.; Hernandez-Monteagudo, C.; Hildebrandt, S. R.; Hobson, M.; Hornstrup, A.; Hovatta, T.; Hovest, W.; Huffenberger, K. M.; Hurier, G.; Jaffe, A. H.; Jaffe, T. R.; Jarvela, E.; Keihanen, E.; Keskitalo, R.; Kisner, T. S.; Kneissl, R.; Knoche, J.; Kunz, M.; Kurki-Suonio, H.; Lahteenmaki, A.; Lamarre, J.-M.; Lasenby, A.; Lattanzi, M.; Lawrence, C. R.; Leonardi, R.; Levrier, F.; Liguori, M.; Lilje, P. B.; Linden-Vornle, M.; Lopez-Caniego, M.; Lubin, P. M.; Macias-Perez, J. F.; Maffei, B.; Maino, D.; Mandolesi, N.; Maris, M.; Martin, P. G.; Martinez-Gonzalez, E.; Masi, S.; Matarrese, S.; Max-Moerbeck, W.; Meinhold, P. R.; Melchiorri, A.; Mennella, A.; Migliaccio, M.; Mingaliev, M.; Miville-Deschenes, M.-A.; Moneti, A.; Montier, L.; Morgante, G.; Mortlock, D.; Munshi, D.; Murphy, J. A.; Nati, F.; Natoli, P.; Nieppola, E.; Noviello, F.; Novikov, D.; Novikov, I.; Pagano, L.; Pajot, F.; Paoletti, D.; Partridge, B.; Pasian, F.; Pearson, T. J.; Perdereau, O.; Perotto, L.; Pettorino, V.; Piacentini, F.; Piat, M.; Pierpaoli, E.; Plaszczynski, S.; Pointecouteau, E.; Polenta, G.; Pratt, G. W.; Ramakrishnan, V.; Rastorgueva-Foi, E. A.; Readhead, A. C. S.; Reinecke, M.; Remazeilles, M.; Renault, C.; Renzi, A.; Richards, J. L.; Ristorcelli, I.; Rocha, G.; Rossetti, M.; Roudier, G.; Rubino-Martin, J. A.; Rusholme, B.; Sandri, M.; Savelainen, M.; Savini, G.; Scott, D.; Sotnikova, Y.; Stolyarov, V.; Sunyaev, R.; Sutton, D.; Suur-Uski, A.-S.; Sygnet, J.-F.; Tammi, J.; Tauber, J. A.; Terenzi, L.; Toffolatti, L.; Tomasi, M.; Tornikoski, M.; Tristram, M.; Tucci, M.; Turler, M.; Valenziano, L.; Valiviita, J.; Valtaoja, E.; van Tent, B.; Vielva, P.; Villa, F.; Wade, L. A.; Wehrle, A. E.; Wehus, I. K.; Yvon, D.; Zacchei, A.; Zonca, A.
2017-04-01
The complete sample presented in this paper consists of 104 northern and equatorial radio-loud AGN. It includes all AGN with declination >=-10° that have a measured average radio flux density at 37GHz exceeding 1Jy. Most of the sample sources have been monitored at Metsahovi Radio Observatory for many years, and the brightest sources have been observed for up to 30yr. (1 data file).
2007-11-01
or other pesticides, or as fumigants for rodent extermination. Additionally, they all are used as a raw material for the synthesis of other chemicals...pressure/ vacuum valve NMR sample tubes (Catalog number 528- PV-9), were purchased from Wilmad-Labglass (Buena, NJ). 2.2 Sample Preparation Hydrogen...cyanide, cyanogen chloride, and phosgene were prepared for NMR spectroscopy by condensing their respective gases into pressure/ vacuum valve NMR sample
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Search for extraterrestrial intelligence (Isaacson+, 2017)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Isaacson, H.; Siemion, A. P. V.; Marcy, G. W.; Lebofsky, M.; Price, D. C.; MacMahon, D.; Croft, S.; Deboer, D.; Hickish, J.; Werthimer, D.; Sheikh, S.; Hellbourg, G.; Enriquez, J. E.
2017-08-01
The stellar sample is defined by two selection criteria. The first is a volume-limited sample of stars within 5pc of the Sun. The second is a spectral class complete sample consisting of stars across the main sequence and some giant branch stars, all within 50pc. We combined the two sub-samples (5pc and 5-50pc) to produce the final set of 1709 target stars that are listed in Table 1. (1 data file).
The Mars Orbital Catalog of Hydrated Alteration Signatures (MOCHAS) - Initial release
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Carter, John; OMEGA and CRISM Teams
2016-10-01
Aqueous minerals have been identified from orbit at a number of localities, and their analysis allowed refining the water story of Early Mars. They are also a main science driver when selecting current and upcoming landing sites for roving missions.Available catalogs of mineral detections exhibit a number of drawbacks such as a limited sample size (a thousand sites at most), inhomogeneous sampling of the surface and of the investigation methods, and the lack of contextual information (e.g. spatial extent, morphological context). The MOCHAS project strives to address such limitations by providing a global, detailed survey of aqueous minerals on Mars based on 10 years of data from the OMEGA and CRISM imaging spectrometers. Contextual data is provided, including deposit sizes, morphology and detailed composition when available. Sampling biases are also addressed.It will be openly distributed in GIS-ready format and will be participative. For example, it will be possible for researchers to submit requests for specific mapping of regions of interest, or add/refine mineral detections.An initial release is scheduled in Fall 2016 and will feature a two orders of magnitude increase in sample size compared to previous studies.
N-point correlation functions in the CfA and SSRS redshift distribution of galaxies
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Gaztanaga, Enrique
1992-01-01
Using counts in cells, we estimate the volume-average N-point galaxy correlation functions for N = 2, 3, and 4, in redshift samples of the CfA and SSRS catalogs. Volume-limited samples of different sizes are used to study the uncertainties at different scales, the shot noise, and the problem with the boundaries. The hierarchical constants S3 and S4 agree well in all samples in CfA and SSRS, with average S3 = 194 +/- 0.07 and S4 = 4.56 +/- 0.53. We compare these results with estimates obtained from angular catalogs and recent analysis over IRAS samples. The amplitudes SJ seem larger in real space than in redshift space, although the values from the angular analysis correspond to smaller scales, where we might expect larger nonperturbative effects. It is also found that S3 and S4 are smaller for IRAS than for optical galaxies. This, together with the fact that IRAS galaxies have smaller amplitude for the above correlation functions, indicates that the density fluctuations of IRAS galaxies cannot be simply proportional to the density fluctuations of optical galaxies, i.e., biasing has to be nonlinear between them.
Improved Point-source Detection in Crowded Fields Using Probabilistic Cataloging
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Portillo, Stephen K. N.; Lee, Benjamin C. G.; Daylan, Tansu; Finkbeiner, Douglas P.
2017-10-01
Cataloging is challenging in crowded fields because sources are extremely covariant with their neighbors and blending makes even the number of sources ambiguous. We present the first optical probabilistic catalog, cataloging a crowded (˜0.1 sources per pixel brighter than 22nd mag in F606W) Sloan Digital Sky Survey r-band image from M2. Probabilistic cataloging returns an ensemble of catalogs inferred from the image and thus can capture source-source covariance and deblending ambiguities. By comparing to a traditional catalog of the same image and a Hubble Space Telescope catalog of the same region, we show that our catalog ensemble better recovers sources from the image. It goes more than a magnitude deeper than the traditional catalog while having a lower false-discovery rate brighter than 20th mag. We also present an algorithm for reducing this catalog ensemble to a condensed catalog that is similar to a traditional catalog, except that it explicitly marginalizes over source-source covariances and nuisance parameters. We show that this condensed catalog has a similar completeness and false-discovery rate to the catalog ensemble. Future telescopes will be more sensitive, and thus more of their images will be crowded. Probabilistic cataloging performs better than existing software in crowded fields and so should be considered when creating photometric pipelines in the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope era.
Deems, Nikolaus J.; Hackley, Paul C.
2012-01-01
The Organic Petrology Laboratory (OPL) of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Eastern Energy Resources Science Center in Reston, Virginia, contains several thousand processed coal sample materials that were loosely organized in laboratory drawers for the past several decades. The majority of these were prepared as 1-inch-diameter particulate coal pellets (more than 6,000 pellets; one sample usually was prepared as two pellets, although some samples were prepared in as many as four pellets), which were polished and used in reflected light petrographic studies. These samples represent the work of many scientists from the 1970s to the present, most notably Ron Stanton, who managed the OPL until 2001 (see Warwick and Ruppert, 2005, for a comprehensive bibliography of Ron Stanton's work). The purpose of the project described herein was to organize and catalog the U.S. part of the petrographic sample collection into a comprehensive database (available with this report as a Microsoft Excel file) and to compile and list published studies associated with the various sample sets. Through this work, the extent of the collection is publicly documented as a resource and sample library available to other scientists and researchers working in U.S. coal basins previously studied by organic petrologists affiliated with the USGS. Other researchers may obtain samples in the OPL collection on loan at the discretion of the USGS authors listed in this report and its associated Web page.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Finch, Charlie T.; Zacharias, Norbert; Jao, Wei-Chun
2018-04-01
We present 916 trigonometric parallaxes and proper motions of newly discovered nearby stars from the United States Naval Observatory Robotic Astrometric Telescope (URAT). Observations were taken at the Cerro Tololo Interamerican Observatory over a 2-year period from 2015 to 2017 October covering the entire sky south of about +25° decl. SPM4 and UCAC4 early epoch catalog data were added to extend the temporal coverage for the parallax and proper motion fit up to 48 years. Using these new URAT parallaxes, optical and near-IR photometry from the AAVSO Photometric All-Sky Survey and Two Micron All-Sky Survey catalogs, we identify possible new nearby dwarfs, young stars, low-metallicity subdwarfs and white dwarfs. Comparison to known trigonometric parallaxes shows a high quality of the URAT-based results confirming the error in parallax of the URAT south parallaxes reported here to be between 2 and 13 mas. We also include additional 729 trigonometric parallaxes from the URAT north 25 pc sample published in Finch & Zacharias here after applying the same criterion as for the southern sample to have a complete URAT 25 pc sample presented in this paper.
Young Stellar Populations in MYStIX Star-forming Regions: Candidate Protostars
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Romine, Gregory; Feigelson, Eric D.; Getman, Konstantin V.; Kuhn, Michael A.; Povich, Matthew S.
2016-12-01
The Massive Young Star-Forming Complex in Infrared and X-ray (MYStIX) project provides a new census on stellar members of massive star-forming regions within 4 kpc. Here the MYStIX Infrared Excess catalog and Chandra-based X-ray photometric catalogs are mined to obtain high-quality samples of Class I protostars using criteria designed to reduce extragalactic and Galactic field star contamination. A total of 1109 MYStIX Candidate Protostars (MCPs) are found in 14 star-forming regions. Most are selected from protoplanetary disk infrared excess emission, but 20% are found from their ultrahard X-ray spectra from heavily absorbed magnetospheric flare emission. Two-thirds of the MCP sample is newly reported here. The resulting samples are strongly spatially associated with molecular cores and filaments on Herschel far-infrared maps. This spatial agreement and other evidence indicate that the MCP sample has high reliability with relatively few “false positives” from contaminating populations. But the limited sensitivity and sparse overlap among the infrared and X-ray subsamples indicate that the sample is very incomplete with many “false negatives.” Maps, tables, and source descriptions are provided to guide further study of star formation in these regions. In particular, the nature of ultrahard X-ray protostellar candidates without known infrared counterparts needs to be elucidated.
The Redshift Completeness of Local Galaxy Catalogs
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kulkarni, S. R.; Perley, D. A.; Miller, A. A.
2018-06-01
There is considerable interest in understanding the demographics of galaxies within the local universe (defined, for our purposes, as the volume within a radius of 200 Mpc or z ≤ 0.05). In this pilot paper, using supernovae (SNe) as signposts to galaxies, we investigate the redshift completeness of catalogs of nearby galaxies. In particular, type Ia SNe are bright and are good tracers of the bulk of the galaxy population, as they arise in both old and young stellar populations. Our input sample consists of SNe with redshift ≤0.05, discovered by the flux-limited ASAS-SN survey. We define the redshift completeness fraction (RCF) as the number of SN host galaxies with known redshift prior to SN discovery, determined, in this case, via the NASA Extragalactic Database, divided by the total number of newly discovered SNe. Using SNe Ia, we find {RCF}=78{+/- }76% (90% confidence interval) for z < 0.03. We examine the distribution of host galaxies with and without cataloged redshifts as a function of absolute magnitude and redshift, and, unsurprisingly, find that higher-z and fainter hosts are less likely to have a known redshift prior to the detection of the SN. However, surprisingly, some {L}* galaxies are also missing. We conclude with thoughts on the future improvement of RCF measurements that will be made possible from large SN samples resulting from ongoing and especially upcoming time-domain surveys.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: IR-bright MSX sources in the SMC with Spitzer/IRS (Kraemer+, 2017)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kraemer, K. E.; Sloan, G. C.; Wood, P. R.; Jones, O. C.; Egan, M. P.
2017-07-01
Our original set of infrared spectra of MSX SMC sources was obtained in Spitzer Cycle 1 (Program ID 3277, P.I. M. Egan). This program included 35 targets from the MSX SMC catalog. 24 targets were discussed in previous papers; this paper examines the remaining 11 sources in the sample. We also selected 4 objects in the MSX SMC catalog with similar photometric characteristics in an effort to uncover additional sources with crystalline dust. We observed these targets in Spitzer Cycle 3 (Program ID 30355, P.I. J. Houck). See tables 1 and 2 for observation data and basic properties of the targets. Table 3 lists 20 additional MSX SMC sources that were observed by other Spitzer IRS programs. Overall, 59 MSX SMC sources were observed with the IRS. The spectra were observed using the low-resolution modules of the IRS, Short-Low (SL) and Long-Low (LL), which provided spectra in the 5-14 and 14-37um ranges, respectively, at a resolution between ~60 and 120. For 10 evolved stars with oxygen-rich dust in our Cycle 1 program, we obtained spectra from 0.45 to 1.03um with the Double-Beam Spectrograph at the 2.3m telescope of the Australian National University at Siding Spring Observatory. A 0.45-0.89um spectrum for one of the stars in program 30355 was also observed. These spectra have a resolution of 10Å. Tables 5-7: catalog based on the 243 sources detected in the MSX survey of the SMC, updated with positions and photometry from more recent space-based missions and ground-based surveys. See the Appendix section for more details. The SMC catalog from MSX consists of the 243 sources in the main MSX catalog (Egan+ 2003, see V/114) that lie within the region 7°
VizieR Online Data Catalog: RPA Southern Pilot Search of 107 Stars (Hansen+, 2018)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hansen, T. T.; Holmbeck, E. M.; Beers, T. C.; Placco, V. M.; Roederer, I. U.; Frebel, A.; Sakari, C. M.; Simon, J. D.; Thompson, I. B.
2018-03-01
Complete equivalent width measurements of FeI and FeII lines for all stars in our sample used to derive spectroscopic stellar parameters. Also included are the derived abundances for each line. (2 data files).
Book Catalogs versus Card Catalogs *
Pizer, Irwin H.
1965-01-01
The development of the library catalog in book form and its abandonment in favor of the card catalog are briefly traced. The advantages and disadvantages of both types of catalogs are enumerated, and several solutions which tried to combine the best features of both are discussed. The present trend back to the book catalog, made possible by recent advances in computer technology, is analyzed, advantages and disadvantages are compared, current examples are illustrated, and finally the computerized catalog is weighed against both the book and card catalog as to main features and practicality. PMID:14271116
Astronomical catalog desk reference, 1994 edition
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
1994-01-01
The Astronomical Catalog Desk Reference is designed to aid astronomers in locating machine readable catalogs in the Astronomical Data Center (ADC) archives. The key reference components of this document are as follows: A listing of shortened titles for all catalogs available from the ADC (includes the name of the lead author and year of publication), brief descriptions of over 300 astronomical catalogs, an index of ADC catalog numbers by subject keyword, and an index of ADC catalog numbers by author. The heart of this document is the set of brief descriptions generated by the ADC staff. The 1994 edition of the Astronomical Catalog Desk Reference contains descriptions for over one third of the catalogs in the ADC archives. Readers are encouraged to refer to this section for concise summaries of those catalogs and their contents.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: BCG high radio-frequency properties (Hogan+, 2015)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hogan, M. T.; Edge, A. C.; Geach, J. E.; Grainge, K. J. B.; Hlavacek-Larrondo, J.; Hovatta, T.; Karim, A.; McNamara, B. R.; Rumsey, C.; Russell, H. R.; Salome, P.; Aller, H. D.; Aller, M. F.; Benford, D. J.; Fabian, A. C.; Readhead, A. C. S.; Sadler, E. M.; Saunders, R. D. E.
2016-02-01
The sample of sources chosen for this study were selected primarily from Hogan et al. (2015. Cat. J/MNRAS/453/1201) as having the brightest (>10mJy at 5GHz), flat-spectrum cores (α<0.5) so a detection above 100GHz was possible. The H15a sample covers an all-sky, X-ray flux-limited sample of over 700 clusters as outlined above, but the number of sources matching these flux and index cuts is relatively small (<30 or <4 per cent). To increase the target list we added seven bright (>50mJy at 5GHz) sources either in fainter clusters and/or clusters misidentified until now. We obtained data from three epochs, using GISMO to observe 29, 24 and 17 sources in 2012 April, November and 2013 April observing runs, respectively, with as many source overlaps between runs as possible 23 sources were observed at 90GHz using the CARMA interferometer in D-array between 2012 May 21-June 15, of which 20 overlap with our GISMO sources. We used the AMI-LA to observe 17 of our sources, with each target visited either two or three times in 2012. Five of the sources in our sample have been monitored as part of this OVRO monitoring campaign. An additional 11 BCGs that were identified from this work as having strong high radio-frequency emission, have been included within the dynamic queue since 2013 January, allowing regular (typically every 10d) observations for these sources. Observations were made using the SCUBA-2 instrument (Holland et al. 2013) on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) as part of a poor weather programme (JCMT weather Bands 4 and 5, {tau}225GHz=0.15-0.3) as part of Canadian and UK projects (M12AC15, M12BC18, M12BU38, M13AC16 and M13AU38) between 2012 February and 2013 July. (4 data files).
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Host galaxies of Superluminous Supernovae (Angus+, 2016)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Angus, C. R.; Levan, A. J.; Perley, D. A.; Tanvir, N. R.; Lyman, J. D.; Stanway, E. R.; Fruchter, A. S.
2016-11-01
Here we use nIR and rest-frame UV observations of a sample of 21 SLSN host galaxies, within a redshift range of 0.019
Design of Formats and Packs of Catalog Cards.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
OCLC Online Computer Library Center, Inc., Dublin, OH.
The three major functions of the Ohio College Library Center's Shared Cataloging System are: 1) provision of union catalog location listing; 2) making available cataloging done by one library to all other users of the system; and 3) production of catalog cards. The system, based on a central machine readable data base, speeds cataloging and…
The Catalog as Portal to the Internet.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Thomas, Sarah E.
This paper examines the potential of the library catalog to serve as a portal to the Internet. The first section provides an overview of the development of the catalog, including the emergence of the union catalog, standardization of cataloging practice, MARC format, and the insufficiency of resources to catalog all the titles acquired by…
Computer Output Microform Library Catalog: A Survey.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Zink, Steven D.
This discussion of the use of computer output microform (COM) as a feasible alternative to the library card catalog includes a brief history of library catalogs and of microform technology since World War II. It is argued that COM catalogs are to be preferred to card catalogs, online catalogs accessed by terminals, and paper printouts. Advantages…
41 CFR 101-30.401 - Data available from the Federal Catalog System.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-07-01
... Federal Catalog System. 101-30.401 Section 101-30.401 Public Contracts and Property Management Federal...-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM 30.4-Use of the Federal Catalog System § 101-30.401 Data available from the Federal Catalog System. Federal Catalog System data are available in publications of general interest to...
41 CFR 101-30.401 - Data available from the Federal Catalog System.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-07-01
... Federal Catalog System. 101-30.401 Section 101-30.401 Public Contracts and Property Management Federal...-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM 30.4-Use of the Federal Catalog System § 101-30.401 Data available from the Federal Catalog System. Federal Catalog System data are available in publications of general interest to...
41 CFR 101-30.401 - Data available from the Federal Catalog System.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-07-01
... Federal Catalog System. 101-30.401 Section 101-30.401 Public Contracts and Property Management Federal...-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM 30.4-Use of the Federal Catalog System § 101-30.401 Data available from the Federal Catalog System. Federal Catalog System data are available in publications of general interest to...
41 CFR 101-30.401 - Data available from the Federal Catalog System.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-07-01
... Federal Catalog System. 101-30.401 Section 101-30.401 Public Contracts and Property Management Federal...-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM 30.4-Use of the Federal Catalog System § 101-30.401 Data available from the Federal Catalog System. Federal Catalog System data are available in publications of general interest to...
41 CFR 101-30.401 - Data available from the Federal Catalog System.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-07-01
... Federal Catalog System. 101-30.401 Section 101-30.401 Public Contracts and Property Management Federal...-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM 30.4-Use of the Federal Catalog System § 101-30.401 Data available from the Federal Catalog System. Federal Catalog System data are available in publications of general interest to...
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Masses and ages of red giants (Martig+, 2016)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Martig, M.; Fouesneau, M.; Rix, H.-W.; Ness, M.; Meszaros, S.; Garcia-Hernandez, D. A.; Pinsonneault, M.; Serenelli, A.; Silva Aguirre, V.; Zamora, O.
2016-10-01
The APOKASC project is the spectroscopic follow-up by APOGEE (Majewski et al. 2015, in prep., as part of the third phase of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, SDSS-III; Eisenstein et al., 2011AJ....142...72E) of stars with asteroseismology data from the Kepler Asteroseismic Science Consortium (KASC). The first version of the APOKASC catalogue (Pinsonneault et al., 2014, Cat. J/ApJS/215/19) contains seismic and spectroscopic measurements for 1989 giants, with the spectroscopic information corresponding to APOGEE's Data Release 10 (DR10; Ahn et al., 2014ApJS..211...17A). In this work, we keep the same original sample of 1989 stars and their seismic parameters, but update their Teff and abundances to DR12 values (Alam et al., 2015ApJS..219...12A; Holtzman et al., 2015AJ....150..148H). (2 data files).
VizieR Online Data Catalog: He abundances in M30 and NGC 6397 (Mucciarelli+, 2014)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Mucciarelli, A.; Lovisi, L.; Lanzoni, B.; Ferraro, F. R.
2017-06-01
In this work we analyzed a set of high-resolution spectra acquired with the multi-object spectrograph FLAMES in the MEDUSA/GIRAFFE mode at the Very Large Telescope of the European Southern Observatory (ESO). The spectra are part of a data set secured within a project aimed at studying the general properties of blue straggler stars (Ferraro et al. 2006ApJ...647L..53F, 2009Natur.462.1028F, 2012Natur.492..393F; Lovisi et al. 2012, J/ApJ/754/91; 2013, J/ApJ/772/148). The employed GIRAFFE grating is HR5A (4340-4587 Å, with a spectral resolution of ~18000), suitable to sample the He I line at 4471.5 Å. Spectra have been reduced with the standard ESO FLAMES pipeline. Six exposures of 45 minutes each have been secured in each cluster. (1 data file).
Groups of galaxies in the Center for Astrophysics redshift survey
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Ramella, Massimo; Geller, Margaret J.; Huchra, John P.
1989-01-01
By applying the Huchra and Geller (1982) objective group identification algorithm to the Center for Astrophysics' redshift survey, a catalog of 128 groups with three or more members is extracted, and 92 of these are used as a statistical sample. A comparison of the distribution of group centers with the distribution of all galaxies in the survey indicates qualitatively that groups trace the large-scale structure of the region. The physical properties of groups may be related to the details of large-scale structure, and it is concluded that differences among group catalogs may be due to the properties of large-scale structures and their location relative to the survey limits.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Rapidly pulsating sdB stars search with GALEX (Boudreaux+, 2017)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Boudreaux, T. M.; Barlow, B. N.; Fleming, S. W.; Soto, A. V.; Million, C.; Reichart, D. E.; Haislip, J. B.; Linder, T. R.; Moore, J. P.
2018-04-01
Here we present a search for short-period hot subdwarf B (sdB) pulsations in the archived GALEX data set using gPhoton (Million+ 2016ApJ...833..292M). An initial sample of 5613 hot subdwarfs (Geier+ 2017, J/A+A/600/A50), which represents a good approximation of all cataloged hot subdwarf stars, was down-selected based on magnitudes, coordinates, and total exposure time available in the gPhoton database, described fully in Section 2. These selection criteria yielded 1881 targets upon which we focused our investigation. Calibrated light curves with time bins of 30s were generated for each target using gPhoton. (4 data files).
Search for Gamma-Ray Emission from Galactic Novae using Fermi-LAT Pass 8
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Buson, Sara; Franckowiak, Anna; Cheung, Teddy; Jean, Pierre; Fermi-LAT Collaboration
2016-01-01
Recently Galactic novae have been identified as a new class of GeV gamma-ray emitters, with 6 detected so far with the Fermi Large Area Telescope (Fermi-LAT) data. Based on optical observations we have compiled a catalog of ~70 Galactic novae, which peak (in optical) during the operations of the Fermi mission. Based on the properties of known gamma-ray novae we developed a search procedure that we apply to all novae in the catalog to detect these slow transient sources or set flux upper limits using the Fermi-LAT Pass 8 data set. This is the first time a large sample of Galactic novae has been uniformly studied.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hsu, L.; Lehnert, K. A.; Walker, J. D.; Chan, C.; Ash, J.; Johansson, A. K.; Rivera, T. A.
2011-12-01
Sample-based measurements in geochemistry are highly diverse, due to the large variety of sample types, measured properties, and idiosyncratic analytical procedures. In order to ensure the utility of sample-based data for re-use in research or education they must be associated with a high quality and quantity of descriptive, discipline-specific metadata. Without an adequate level of documentation, it is not possible to reproduce scientific results or have confidence in using the data for new research inquiries. The required detail in data documentation makes it challenging to aggregate large sets of data from different investigators and disciplines. One solution to this challenge is to build data systems with several tiers of intricacy, where the less detailed tiers are geared toward discovery and interoperability, and the more detailed tiers have higher value for data analysis. The Geoinformatics for Geochemistry (GfG) group, which is part of the Integrated Earth Data Applications facility (http://www.iedadata.org), has taken this approach to provide services for the discovery, access, and analysis of sample-based geochemical data for a diverse user community, ranging from the highly informed geochemist to non-domain scientists and undergraduate students. GfG builds and maintains three tiers in the sample based data systems, from a simple data catalog (Geochemical Resource Library), to a substantially richer data model for the EarthChem Portal (EarthChem XML), and finally to detailed discipline-specific data models for petrologic (PetDB), sedimentary (SedDB), hydrothermal spring (VentDB), and geochronological (GeoChron) samples. The data catalog, the lowest level in the hierarchy, contains the sample data values plus metadata only about the dataset itself (Dublin Core metadata such as dataset title and author), and therefore can accommodate the widest diversity of data holdings. The second level includes measured data values from the sample, basic information about the analytical method, and metadata about the samples such as geospatial information and sample type. The third and highest level includes detailed data quality documentation and more specific information about the scientific context of the sample. The three tiers are linked to allow users to quickly navigate to their desired level of metadata detail. Links are based on the use of unique identifiers: (a) DOI at the granularity of datasets, and (b) the International Geo Sample Number IGSN at the granularity of samples. Current developments in the GfG sample-based systems include new registry architecture for the IGSN to advance international implementation, growth and modification of EarthChemXML to include geochemical data for new sample types such as soils and liquids, and the construction of a hydrothermal vent data system. This flexible, tiered, model provides a solution for offering varying levels of detail in order to aggregate a large quantity of data and serve the largest user group of both disciplinary novices and experts.
Imperial Valley Environmental Project: quarterly data report
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Nyholm, R.A.; Anspaugh, L.R.
This is a catalog of all samples which have been collected and the presently available results of chemical and other analyses. Types covered include: air quality, water quality, ecosystem quality, subsidence and seismicity, remotely sensed data, socioeconomic effects, and measurements of radioactivity. (MHR)
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Planet occurrence rates calculated for KOIs (Mulders+, 2015)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Mulders, G. D.; Pascucci, I.; Apai, D.
2016-03-01
Planet occurrence rates are calculated using the methodology described in Mulders et al. (2015ApJ...798..112M). We use the planet candidate sample from Mullally et al. (2015, J/ApJS/217/31). (1 data file).
A Comparison of Two Out-of-Print Book Buying Methods
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Kim, Ung Chon
1973-01-01
Two out-of-print book buying methods, searching desiderata files against out-of print book catalogs and advertising want lists in The Library Bookseller,'' are compared based on the data collected from a sample of 168 titles. (7 references) (Author)
VizieR Online Data Catalog: Comoving stars in Gaia DR1 (Oh+, 2017)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Oh, S.; Price-Whelan, A. M.; Hogg, D. W.; Morton, T. D.; Spergel, D. N.
2017-08-01
The primary data set used in this article is the Tycho-Gaia Astrometric Solution (TGAS), released as a part of Data Release 1 (DR1) of the Gaia mission (Gaia Collaboration et al. 2016, Cat. I/337; Lindegren et al. 2016A&A...595A...4L). (3 data files).
Science Education in Two-Year Colleges: Physics.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Mooney, William T., Jr.
Physics instruction is examined as revealed in a study of science education at two-year colleges which involved a review of the literature, an analysis of the catalogs and class schedules of 175 representative institutions, and a survey of 45 physics instructors. Each of the two parts of the report reviews pertinent literature, reports study…
2004-01-10
This frame from an animation flips back and forth between images taken before and after deployment of the Mars Exploration Rover Spirit's bogie, a part of the rover's suspension system that extends the wheel base. These images were taken by Spirit's hazard avoidance camera. An animation is available at http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA05040
Big6 Stage 3 - Location and Access Treasure Hunting
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Darrow, Rob
2005-01-01
Locating sources and accessing the information they contain is part of the Big6 approach to information problem solving. In this stage of knowing where to look and how to find the required source, library media specialists train students in the use of the card catalog in the library media center.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Lofgren, G. E.; Lofgren, E. M.
1981-01-01
Megascopic descriptions of 133 basaltic rocks returned from the Moon are presented along with photographs of each rock and its thin section, if available. The major and trace element chemistry of each is included wherever possible.
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2012-06-19
... outcome data for program improvement; and meeting new requirements in the IDEA Part C regulations issued... DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION Applications for New Awards: Technical Assistance and Dissemination To... applications for new awards for fiscal year (FY) 2012. Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance (CFDA) Number: 84...
31 CFR 205.1 - What Federal assistance programs are covered by this part?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-07-01
...; and (2) All Federal program agencies, except the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) and its Federal assistance programs. (b) Only programs listed in the Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance, as established... 31 Money and Finance:Treasury 2 2013-07-01 2013-07-01 false What Federal assistance programs are...
31 CFR 205.1 - What Federal assistance programs are covered by this part?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-07-01
...; and (2) All Federal program agencies, except the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) and its Federal assistance programs. (b) Only programs listed in the Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance, as established... 31 Money and Finance:Treasury 2 2011-07-01 2011-07-01 false What Federal assistance programs are...
31 CFR 205.1 - What Federal assistance programs are covered by this part?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-07-01
...; and (2) All Federal program agencies, except the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) and its Federal assistance programs. (b) Only programs listed in the Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance, as established... 31 Money and Finance: Treasury 2 2014-07-01 2014-07-01 false What Federal assistance programs are...
31 CFR 205.1 - What Federal assistance programs are covered by this part?
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-07-01
...; and (2) All Federal program agencies, except the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) and its Federal assistance programs. (b) Only programs listed in the Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance, as established... 31 Money and Finance:Treasury 2 2012-07-01 2012-07-01 false What Federal assistance programs are...
2018-04-25
The rounded hills in this VIS image are located in Arcadia Planitia. Broad linear ridges and groups of hills in this region are part of Phlegra Dorsa (ridges) and Phlegra Montes (hills). Orbit Number: 71248 Latitude: 30.6712 Longitude: 171.018 Instrument: VIS Captured: 2018-01-05 17:05 https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA22377
Introduction to Technical Services. Seventh Edition. Library and Information Science Text Series.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Evans, G. Edward; Intner, Sheila S.; Weihs, Jean
This updated edition covers all aspects of library technical services--from acquisitions to managing the cataloging department--with new emphasis on automation as it affects technical services work and those skills that can be developed through work experience or classroom instruction. Part One, General Background, consists of four chapters that…
2015-05-22
The linear wall at the bottom of this image from NASA 2001 Mars Odyssey spacecraft is a fault. The linear depression caused by faulting is part of a long depression called Mangala Fossae. Orbit Number: 58979 Latitude: -17.9823 Longitude: 210.806 Instrument: VIS Captured: 2015-04-01 00:54 http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA19468
ASAS-SN Discovery of a Bright Be Star Undergoing a Possible Outburst
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Jayasinghe, T.; Stanek, K. Z.; Kochanek, C. S.; Thorstensen, J.; Rupert, J.; Prieto, J. L.; Shields, J. V.; Thompson, T. A.; Holoien, T. W.-S.; Shappee, B. J.; Dong, Subo
2017-09-01
As part of an ongoing effort by ASAS-SN project (Shappee et al. 2014; Kochanek et al. 2017) to characterize and catalog all bright variable stars (e.g., Jayasinghe et al. 2017, ATel #10634, #10677), we report the discovery of a bright Be star undergoing a possible outburst.
16 CFR 305.4 - Prohibited acts.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... the product as required by this part is accurate. This action will be taken only after review of a... shall not apply to: (1) Any covered product if it is manufactured, imported, sold, or held for sale for... to any covered products that were manufactured prior to May 19, 1980; any catalog or point-of-sale...
Boo! Outsourcing from the Cataloging Perspective.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Hill, Janet Swan
1998-01-01
Examines long-accepted ways library cataloging departments have used outsourcing (cataloging records, card production, authority control, card filling, and retrospective conversion) and potential outsourcing activities (original cataloging, and copy cataloging). Discusses reasons why outsourcing is controversial. (PEN)
A Use Study of the Card Catalogs in the University of Illinois Music Library.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Drone, Jeanette M.
1984-01-01
A multifaceted card catalog use study was conducted at University of Illinois Music Library to determine hourly rate of use at sound recording and book/music catalogs; time spent at catalogs; who uses catalogs and why; difficulties users encounter; success rate of users' searches; recommendations for designing online catalog. (16 references)…
The Future of Catalogers and Cataloging.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Holley, Robert P.
1981-01-01
Future emphasis in cataloging will be on the sharing of high quality bibliographic records through a national network. As original cataloging decreases, catalogers, rather than disappearing, will more likely be managers of the library's bibliographic control system. (Author/RAA)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hilton, Matt; Hasselfield, Matthew; Sifón, Cristóbal; Battaglia, Nicholas; Aiola, Simone; Bharadwaj, V.; Bond, J. Richard; Choi, Steve K.; Crichton, Devin; Datta, Rahul; Devlin, Mark J.; Dunkley, Joanna; Dünner, Rolando; Gallardo, Patricio A.; Gralla, Megan; Hincks, Adam D.; Ho, Shuay-Pwu P.; Hubmayr, Johannes; Huffenberger, Kevin M.; Hughes, John P.; Koopman, Brian J.; Kosowsky, Arthur; Louis, Thibaut; Madhavacheril, Mathew S.; Marriage, Tobias A.; Maurin, Loïc; McMahon, Jeff; Miyatake, Hironao; Moodley, Kavilan; Næss, Sigurd; Nati, Federico; Newburgh, Laura; Niemack, Michael D.; Oguri, Masamune; Page, Lyman A.; Partridge, Bruce; Schmitt, Benjamin L.; Sievers, Jon; Spergel, David N.; Staggs, Suzanne T.; Trac, Hy; van Engelen, Alexander; Vavagiakis, Eve M.; Wollack, Edward J.
2018-03-01
We present a catalog of 182 galaxy clusters detected through the Sunyaev–Zel’dovich (SZ) effect by the Atacama Cosmology Telescope in a contiguous 987.5 deg2 field. The clusters were detected as SZ decrements by applying a matched filter to 148 GHz maps that combine the original ACT equatorial survey with data from the first two observing seasons using the ACTPol receiver. Optical/IR confirmation and redshift measurements come from a combination of large public surveys and our own follow-up observations. Where necessary, we measured photometric redshifts for clusters using a pipeline that achieves accuracy Δz/(1 + z) = 0.015 when tested on Sloan Digital Sky Survey data. Under the assumption that clusters can be described by the so-called universal pressure profile (UPP) and its associated mass scaling law, the full signal-to-noise ratio > 4 sample spans the mass range 1.6< {M}500{{c}}UPP}/{10}14 {M}ȯ < 9.1, with median {M}500{{c}}UPP}=3.1× {10}14 {M}ȯ . The sample covers the redshift range 0.1 < z < 1.4 (median z = 0.49), and 28 clusters are new discoveries (median z = 0.80). We compare our catalog with other overlapping cluster samples selected using the SZ, optical, and X-ray wavelengths. We find that the ratio of the UPP-based SZ mass to richness-based weak-lensing mass is < {M}500{{c}}UPP}> /< {M}500{{c}}λ {WL}> =0.68+/- 0.11. After applying this calibration, the mass distribution for clusters with M 500c > 4 × 1014 M ⊙ is consistent with the number of such clusters found in the South Pole Telescope SZ survey.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Cuoco, Alessandro; Xia, Jun-Qing; Regis, Marco; Branchini, Enzo; Fornengo, Nicolao; Viel, Matteo
2015-12-01
We compare the measured angular cross-correlation between the Fermi-Large Area Telescope γ-ray sky and catalogs of extragalactic objects with the expected signal induced by weakly interacting massive particle (WIMP) dark matter (DM). We include a detailed description of the contribution of astrophysical γ-ray emitters such as blazars, misaligned active galactic nucleus (AGN), and star-forming galaxies, and perform a global fit to the measured cross-correlation. Five catalogs are considered: Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS)-DR6 quasars, Two Micron All Sky Survey galaxies, NRAO VLA Sky Survey radio galaxies, SDSS-DR8 Luminous Red Galaxies, and the SDSS-DR8 main galaxy sample. To model the cross-correlation signal, we use the halo occupation distribution formalism to estimate the number of galaxies of a given catalog in DM halos and their spatial correlation properties. We discuss uncertainties in the predicted cross-correlation signal arising from the DM clustering and WIMP microscopic properties, which set the DM γ-ray emission. The use of different catalogs probing objects at different redshifts significantly reduces, though not completely, the degeneracy among the different γ-ray components. We find that the presence of a significant WIMP DM signal is allowed by the data but not significantly preferred by the fit, although this is mainly due to a degeneracy with the misaligned AGN component. With modest substructure boost, the sensitivity of this method excludes thermal annihilation cross sections at 95% level for WIMP masses up to few tens of GeV. Constraining the low-redshift properties of astrophysical populations with future data will further improve the sensitivity to DM.
1983-02-28
tire, .v ,.,, DNA 5433F-2 I 1 UNIFICATION OF ELECTROMAGNETIC -’, SPECIFICATIONS AND STANDARDS Part Ih: Recommendations for Revisions of Existing...ADDRESSEE IS NO LONGER EMPLOYED BY" "• YOUR ORGANIZATION. ... : 1 ,S ::! ,.S ., UNCLASSIFIED SECURITY CLASSIFICATION OF THIS PAGE (When D.e. 6.e1e..c...REPORT DOCUMENTATION PAGE BEFORE COMPETISRM 1 . REPORT NUMBER 2. GOVT ACCESSION NO. 3. RECIPIENT’S CATALOG NUMBER DNA 5433F-2 1 /f9 I;’,71 4. TITLE
Building the IOOS data management subsystem
de La Beaujardière, J.; Mendelssohn, R.; Ortiz, C.; Signell, R.
2010-01-01
We discuss progress to date and plans for the Integrated Ocean Observing System (IOOS??) Data Management and Communications (DMAC) subsystem. We begin by presenting a conceptual architecture of IOOS DMAC. We describe work done as part of a 3-year pilot project known as the Data Integration Framework and the subsequent assessment of lessons learned. We present work that has been accomplished as part of the initial version of the IOOS Data Catalog. Finally, we discuss near-term plans for augmenting IOOS DMAC capabilities.
Seismicity of the North of the Russian Plate: Relocation of Recent Earthquakese
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Morozov, A. N.; Vaganova, N. V.; Asming, V. E.; Mikhailova, Ya. A.
2018-03-01
The hypocenters of the earthquakes recorded in the north of the Russian Plate from 1982 to 2013 are relocated. The relocation of the hypocenters is based on the common velocity section, common methodology, and the entire set of the initial data and bulletins available from the Russian and foreign seismic stations. The efficiency of the algorithm for calculating the hypocentral parameters and the velocity section is demonstrated by the example of two nonmilitary nuclear explosions in July 18, 1985 and September 6, 1988 in the northern part of the European Russia. For the first time, two earthquakes of July 19, 1982 and October 7, 2012, which have not been previously reported in the catalogs for the north of the Russian plate, are included in the seismic catalog.
Occurrence of Radio Minihalos in a Mass-Limited Sample of Galaxy Clusters
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Giacintucci, Simona; Markevitch, Maxim; Cassano, Rossella; Venturi, Tiziana; Clarke, Tracy E.; Brunetti, Gianfranco
2017-01-01
We investigate the occurrence of radio minihalos-diffuse radio sources of unknown origin observed in the cores of some galaxy clusters-in a statistical sample of 58 clusters drawn from the Planck Sunyaev-Zeldovich cluster catalog using a mass cut (M(sub 500) greater than 6 x 10(exp 14) solar mass). We supplement our statistical sample with a similarly sized nonstatistical sample mostly consisting of clusters in the ACCEPT X-ray catalog with suitable X-ray and radio data, which includes lower-mass clusters. Where necessary (for nine clusters), we reanalyzed the Very Large Array archival radio data to determine whether a minihalo is present. Our total sample includes all 28 currently known and recently discovered radio minihalos, including six candidates. We classify clusters as cool-core or non-cool-core according to the value of the specific entropy floor in the cluster center, rederived or newly derived from the Chandra X-ray density and temperature profiles where necessary (for 27 clusters). Contrary to the common wisdom that minihalos are rare, we find that almost all cool cores-at least 12 out of 15 (80%)-in our complete sample of massive clusters exhibit minihalos. The supplementary sample shows that the occurrence of minihalos may be lower in lower-mass cool-core clusters. No minihalos are found in non-cool cores or "warm cores." These findings will help test theories of the origin of minihalos and provide information on the physical processes and energetics of the cluster cores.
Apollo Lunar Sample Photograph Digitization Project Update
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Todd, N. S.; Lofgren, G. E.
2012-01-01
This is an update of the progress of a 4-year data restoration project effort funded by the LASER program to digitize photographs of the Apollo lunar rock samples and create high resolution digital images and undertaken by the Astromaterials Acquisition and Curation Office at JSC [1]. The project is currently in its last year of funding. We also provide an update on the derived products that make use of the digitized photos including the Lunar Sample Catalog and Photo Database[2], Apollo Sample data files for GoogleMoon[3].
The end of the MACHO era, revisited: New limits on MACHO masses from halo wide binaries
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Monroy-Rodríguez, Miguel A.; Allen, Christine, E-mail: chris@astro.unam.mx
2014-08-01
In order to determine an upper bound for the mass of the massive compact halo objects (MACHOs), we use the halo binaries contained in a recent catalog by Allen and Monroy-Rodríguez. To dynamically model their interactions with massive perturbers, a Monte Carlo simulation is conducted, using an impulsive approximation method and assuming a galactic halo constituted by massive particles of a characteristic mass. The results of such simulations are compared with several subsamples of our improved catalog of candidate halo wide binaries. In accordance with Quinn et al., we also find our results to be very sensitive to the widestmore » binaries. However, our larger sample, together with the fact that we can obtain galactic orbits for 150 of our systems, allows a more reliable estimate of the maximum MACHO mass than that obtained previously. If we employ the entire sample of 211 candidate halo stars we, obtain an upper limit of 112 M{sub ☉}. However, using the 150 binaries in our catalog with computed galactic orbits, we are able to refine our fitting criteria. Thus, for the 100 most halo-like binaries we obtain a maximum MACHO mass of 21-68 M{sub ☉}. Furthermore, we can estimate the dynamical effects of the galactic disk using binary samples that spend progressively shorter times within the disk. By extrapolating the limits obtained for our most reliable—albeit smallest—sample, we find that as the time spent within the disk tends to zero, the upper bound of the MACHO mass tends to less than 5 M{sub ☉}. The non-uniform density of the halo has also been taken into account, but the limit obtained, less than 5 M{sub ☉}, does not differ much from the previous one. Together with microlensing studies that provide lower limits on the MACHO mass, our results essentially exclude the existence of such objects in the galactic halo.« less
Preservation Benefits Geoscientific Investigations Across the Nation
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Powers, L. A.; Latysh, N.
2017-12-01
Since 2005, the National Geological and Geophysical Data Preservation Program (NGGDPP) of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) has distributed financial grants to state geological surveys to preserve, archive, and make available valuable geoscientific samples and data to researchers and the public. States have cataloged and preserved materials that include geophysical logs, geotechnical reports, fragile historical documents, maps, geologic samples, and legacy aerial and field-investigation photographs. Approximately 3 million metadata records describing preserved data and artifacts are cataloged in the National Digital Catalog, a component of the USGS ScienceBase data management infrastructure. Providing a centralized domain in the National Digital Catalog for uniformly described records has enabled discovery of important geoscientific assets across the Nation. Scientific investigations continue to be informed by preserved materials and data. Tennessee Geological Survey's preserved collection of historical documents describing coal mining activities in the State was used to identify vulnerable areas overlying abandoned underground coal mines, which caused surface collapses and sinkholes in populated areas. Missouri Geological Survey's preserved collection of legacy field notebooks was used to identify thousands of abandoned mines, many of which have significant soil or groundwater lead contamination and are located in areas that now have residential development. The information enabled the evaluation of risk to human health, environment, and infrastructure and identification of needed remedial actions. Information in the field notebooks also assisted the Missouri Department of Transportation responding to highway collapses and assessing collapse potential in abandoned coal mining lands. Digitization of natural gamma ray logs allowed Minnesota Geological Survey staff to directly access well data in the field, accelerating the ability to address geoscientific questions related to aquifer studies, contaminant transport, and geologic mapping and characterization. Digitization and preservation of materials and data, which would otherwise be prohibitively expensive or impossible to reproduce, are a nominal cost compared to the return in societal value that they provide.
The DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey: The Voronoi-Delaunay Method Catalog of Galaxy Groups
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Gerke, Brian F.; /UC, Berkeley; Newman, Jeffrey A.
2012-02-14
We use the first 25% of the DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey spectroscopic data to identify groups and clusters of galaxies in redshift space. The data set contains 8370 galaxies with confirmed redshifts in the range 0.7 {<=} z {<=} 1.4, over one square degree on the sky. Groups are identified using an algorithm (the Voronoi-Delaunay Method) that has been shown to accurately reproduce the statistics of groups in simulated DEEP2-like samples. We optimize this algorithm for the DEEP2 survey by applying it to realistic mock galaxy catalogs and assessing the results using a stringent set of criteria for measuring group-findingmore » success, which we develop and describe in detail here. We find in particular that the group-finder can successfully identify {approx}78% of real groups and that {approx}79% of the galaxies that are true members of groups can be identified as such. Conversely, we estimate that {approx}55% of the groups we find can be definitively identified with real groups and that {approx}46% of the galaxies we place into groups are interloper field galaxies. Most importantly, we find that it is possible to measure the distribution of groups in redshift and velocity dispersion, n({sigma}, z), to an accuracy limited by cosmic variance, for dispersions greater than 350 km s{sup -1}. We anticipate that such measurements will allow strong constraints to be placed on the equation of state of the dark energy in the future. Finally, we present the first DEEP2 group catalog, which assigns 32% of the galaxies to 899 distinct groups with two or more members, 153 of which have velocity dispersions above 350 km s{sup -1}. We provide locations, redshifts and properties for this high-dispersion subsample. This catalog represents the largest sample to date of spectroscopically detected groups at z {approx} 1.« less
Inlet Cover On the Curiosity Rover
2018-06-04
The drill bit of NASA's Curiosity Mars rover over one of the sample inlets on the rover's deck. The inlets lead to Curiosity's onboard laboratories. This image was taken on Sol 2068 by the rover's Mast Camera (Mastcam). https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA22327
VizieR Online Data Catalog: New IR photometric study of Ap and Am stars (Chen+, 2017)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Chen, P. S.; Liu, J. Y.; Shan, H. G.
2018-05-01
In the General Catalog of Ap and Am stars (Renson & Manfroid 2009, Cat. III/260) 8265 stars are included in which, as Renson & Manfroid (2009, Cat. III/260) described, only 426 stars are of the "well known confirmed sample". We take these 426 stars as our working sample. The cross-identifications of 2MASS/WISE counterparts for all Ap, Am, and HgMn stars listed in this paper are made from Cutri et al. (2012, Cat. II/311) by using the radius of 2 arcsec. All 426 Ap, Am, and HgMn stars have 2MASS and/or WISE counterparts, which are listed in Table 3. The cross-identifications of IRAS counterparts are made according to the positional error ellipse of the source, because it has a 95% confidence level (IRAS Explanatory Supplement, Beichman et al. 1988, Cat. II/274). Finally, 202 stars are found to have the IRAS counterparts from IRAS PSC/FSC, which is listed in Table 4. (5 data files).
The kinematics of dense clusters of galaxies. II - The distribution of velocity dispersions
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Zabludoff, Ann I.; Geller, Margaret J.; Huchra, John P.; Ramella, Massimo
1993-01-01
From the survey of 31 Abell R above 1 cluster fields within z of 0.02-0.05, we extract 25 dense clusters with velocity dispersions omicron above 300 km/s and with number densities exceeding the mean for the Great Wall of galaxies by one deviation. From the CfA Redshift Survey (in preparation), we obtain an approximately volume-limited catalog of 31 groups with velocity dispersions above 100 km/s and with the same number density limit. We combine these well-defined samples to obtain the distribution of cluster velocity dispersions. The group sample enables us to correct for incompleteness in the Abell catalog at low velocity dispersions. The clusters from the Abell cluster fields populate the high dispersion tail. For systems with velocity dispersions above 700 km/s, approximately the median for R = 1 clusters, the group and cluster abundances are consistent. The combined distribution is consistent with cluster X-ray temperature functions.
Very low-mass stars and brown dwarfs from 2MASS and DENIS.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Chester, T.
2MASS (Two Micron All Sky Survey) and DENIS (DEep Near-Infrared survey of the Southern sky) will provide a sample of very low mass stars that is complete to a distance of 50 pc, even for the latest M star currently known. This compares with the current completeness out to 5 - 10 pc. This sample will contain 1,000 to 10,000 times more M stars than currently cataloged. This catalog will be free from proper motion selection effects and will not be limited by the completeness of optical magnitude studies. Evidence from several square degrees of proto-camera data processed and examined to date, shows that roughly 1 source is found in every square degree that has no counterpart on a POSS I plate. The first of these sources was found to be a binary system with component stars of roughly equal brightness having an M6 - M7 combined spectrum. The author discusses the effectiveness of these surveys for detecting brown dwarfs.
,
2015-01-01
The general consideration for implementation of the GCMS is that all active USGS geologic sample repositories will form the core of GCMS and that participating science centers will develop procedures based on proposed GCMS methodologies. The GCMS is a collective resource for the entire USGS community and the users who discover the geologic materials kept in these repositories and seek to access them.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: GOALS sample PACS and SPIRE fluxes (Chu+, 2017)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Chu, J. K.; Sanders, D. B.; Larson, K. L.; Mazzarella, J. M.; Howell, J. H.; Diaz-Santos, T.; Xu, K. C.; Paladini, R.; Schulz, B.; Shupe, D.; Appleton, P.; Armus, L.; Billot, N.; Chan, B. H. P.; Evans, A. S.; Fadda, D.; Frayer, D. T.; Haan, S.; Ishida, C. M.; Iwasawa, K.; Kim, D.-C.; Lord, S.; Murphy, E.; Petric, A.; Privon, G. C.; Surace, J. A.; Treister, E.
2017-06-01
The IRAS RBGS contains 179 LIRGs (log(LIR/Lȯ)= 22 ultra-luminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs: log(LIR/Lȯ)>=12.0); these 201 total objects comprise the GOALS sample (Armus et al. 2009), a statistically complete flux-limited sample of infrared-luminous galaxies in the local universe. This paper presents imaging and photometry for all 201 LIRGs and LIRG systems in the IRAS RBGS that were observed during our GOALS Herschel OT1 program. (4 data files).
Studies of an x ray selected sample of cataclysmic variables. Ph.D. Thesis
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Silber, Andrew D.
1986-01-01
Just prior to the thesis research, an all-sky survey in hard x rays with the HEAO-1 satellite and further observations in the optical resulted in a catalog of about 700 x-ray sources with known optical counterparts. This sample includes 43 cataclysmic variables, which are binaries consisting of a detached white-dwarf and a Roche lobe filling companion star. This thesis consists of studies of the x-ray selected sample of catalcysmic variables.
The first comprehensive catalog of γ Dor pulsators and their characteristics
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ibanoglu, C.; Çakırlı, Ö.; Sipahi, E.
2018-07-01
We present the first comprehensive catalog of the γ Doradus type pulsating stars. This catalog covers observational properties of all γ Dor variables obtained until January 2017. The photometric and physical properties of 109 well - known γ Dor pulsators, 18 hybrid stars, 13 anomalous γ Dor stars, and 22 γ Dor stars in eclipsing plus 1 non-eclipsing SB2 binary systems are presented as separate tables. In addition, 291 candidate γ Dor variables discovered by CoRot, 307 candidate γ Dor, 205 hybrid and 11 candidate γ Dor in binaries discovered by Kepler were also presented. Distribution of the genuine single γ Dor pulsators in the Ppuls-Teff, Amplitude-Teff, Amplitude-Ppuls and L-Teff diagrams are presented and discussed. We find following correlations for the γ Dor pulsators in the eclipsing binaries: Ppuls ∝ Porb0.27, Ppuls ∝ Q0.45, and Ppuls ∝ r-0.44, where (Q) is the pulsation constant and r is the fractional radius of the pulsating component in the binary system. The correlation coefficients are not high enough due to limited sample and scattering in the data.
Multiwavelength Properties of Faint Submillimeter Galaxies with Archival ALMA Data
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Patil, Pallavi; Lacy, Mark; Nyland, Kristina
2018-01-01
Detection of Faint submillimeter galaxies was made possible by large improvements in the spatial resolution and sensitivity by interferometric observations. These galaxies are a dominant contributor to the extragalactic background light at millimeter wavelengths and are likely to play a significant role in galaxy evolution. We present a catalog of 28 such galaxies with S(1.1 mm) < 1.0 mJy that have 13-band optical/near IR photometry (Spitzer DeepDrill, VIDEO, CFHTLS, and HSC) and serendipitous detections in ALMA band 6. ALMA 1.1 mm continuum observations were cross-matched with the K-band VIDEO catalog in the XMM-LSS field to identify multiwavelength counterparts. A forced Photometry approach based on the Tractor image modeling code is used to construct the catalog. The median photometric redshift of the sample is z ~ 1.96 along with two high redshift candidates at z ~ 5. We have provided population statistics using multiband photometry and estimated galaxy properties such as dust and gas masses. We aim to provide a detailed characterization of this population to ultimately devise better selection techniques for future wide-area sky surveys.
12th National Cataloguing Conference.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Tan, Janine; Olston, Julie; Dearman, Rosemary; Hay, Ros; Butler, Gabrielle; Giopoulos, Jenny; Moloney, Julie; Pearce, Fran
1997-01-01
Summarizes issues raised at the 1997 national cataloging conference of the Australian Library and Information Association. Includes a draft procedural document for cataloging Internet sites and provides reports from five workshops on human resource management in cataloging, career strategies for catalogers, cataloging standards, the Anglo-American…
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kamer, Yavor; Ouillon, Guy; Sornette, Didier; Wössner, Jochen
2014-05-01
Latest advances in the instrumentation field have increased the station coverage and lowered event detection thresholds. This has resulted in a vast increase in the number of located events with each year. The abundance of data comes as a double edged sword: while it facilitates more robust statistics and provides better confidence intervals, it also paralyzes computations whose execution times grow exponentially with the number of data points. In this study, we present a novel method that assesses the relative importance of each data point, reduces the size of datasets while preserving the information content. For a given seismic catalog, the goal is to express the same spatial probability density distribution with fewer data points. To achieve this, we exploit the fact that seismic catalogs are not optimally encoded. This coding deficiency is the result of the sequential data entry where new events are added without taking into account previous ones. For instance, if there are several events with identical parameters occurring at the same location, these could be grouped together rather than occupying the same memory space as if they were distinct events. Following this reasoning, the proposed condensation methodology is implemented by grouping all event according to their overall variance, starting from the group with the highest variance (worst location uncertainty), each event is sampled by a number of sample points, these points are then used to calculate which better located events are able to express these probable locations with a higher likelihood. Based on these likelihood comparisons, weights from poorly located events are successively transferred to better located ones. As a result of the process, a large portion of the events (~30%) ends up with zero weights (thus being fully represented by events increasing their weights), while the information content (i.e the sum of all weights) remains preserved. The resulting condensed catalog not only provides more optimally encoding but is also regularized with respect to the local information quality. By investigating the locations of mass enrichment and depletion at different scales, we observe that the areas of increased mass are in good agreement with reported surface fault traces. We also conduct multifractal spatial analysis on condensed catalogs and investigate different spatial scaling regimes made clearer by reducing the effect of location uncertainty.
VizieR Online Data Catalog: SDSS DLA and absorber quasar samples (Murphy+, 2016)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Murphy, M. T.; Bernet, M. L.
2016-07-01
Using spectral slope fits of the SDSS DR7 quasar spectra, and the DLA/sub-DLA identifications of Noterdaeme et al. (2009, Cat. J/A+A/505/1087), we found that the 774 selected quasars with a single foreground DLA are significantly (3.2σ) redder, on average, than carefully selected control groups drawn from a sample of ~7000 quasars without foreground DLAs. (4 data files).
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-07-01
... within the civil agencies. (2) Each item included in the Federal Catalog System shall be classified under... FEDERAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS SUPPLY AND PROCUREMENT 30-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM 30.2-Cataloging... and maintained in the Federal Catalog System as prescribed in the Federal Catalog System Policy Manual...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-07-01
... within the civil agencies. (2) Each item included in the Federal Catalog System shall be classified under... FEDERAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS SUPPLY AND PROCUREMENT 30-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM 30.2-Cataloging... and maintained in the Federal Catalog System as prescribed in the Federal Catalog System Policy Manual...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-07-01
... within the civil agencies. (2) Each item included in the Federal Catalog System shall be classified under... FEDERAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS SUPPLY AND PROCUREMENT 30-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM 30.2-Cataloging... and maintained in the Federal Catalog System as prescribed in the Federal Catalog System Policy Manual...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-07-01
... within the civil agencies. (2) Each item included in the Federal Catalog System shall be classified under... FEDERAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS SUPPLY AND PROCUREMENT 30-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM 30.2-Cataloging... and maintained in the Federal Catalog System as prescribed in the Federal Catalog System Policy Manual...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-07-01
... within the civil agencies. (2) Each item included in the Federal Catalog System shall be classified under... FEDERAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS SUPPLY AND PROCUREMENT 30-FEDERAL CATALOG SYSTEM 30.2-Cataloging... and maintained in the Federal Catalog System as prescribed in the Federal Catalog System Policy Manual...
Documentation and environment of the Apollo 16 samples: A preliminary report
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
1972-01-01
A catalog which is a working document that shows the locations from which samples were collected during the Apollo 16 mission, and that provides a descriptive geologic context for each sample is presented. It is a compilation of notes from work in progress, and supersedes an earlier report prepared by the Apollo Lunar Geology Investigation Team. The information was obtained from the Air-to-Ground transcript from the astronaut crew, from lunar surface television, from 60 mm Hasselblad camera photographs, and from available LRL mugshot photographs of the samples. The sample descriptions are based on these sources of data.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Pratt, Virginia; And Others
Faced with an old and increasingly complex card catalog and with proposed changes in the Library of Congress (LC) cataloging system, the Subcommittee on the Future of the Catalogs at the University of California, Berkeley (UCB) Library considered methods for dealing with these joint problems of catalog renovation and…
A catalog of polychromatic bulge-disc decompositions of ˜17.600 galaxies in CANDELS
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Dimauro, Paola; Huertas-Company, Marc; Daddi, Emanuele; Pérez-González, Pablo G.; Bernardi, Mariangela; Barro, Guillermo; Buitrago, Fernando; Caro, Fernando; Cattaneo, Andrea; Dominguez-Sánchez, Helena; Faber, Sandra M.; Häußler, Boris; Kocevski, Dale D.; Koekemoer, Anton M.; Koo, David C.; Lee, Christoph T.; Mei, Simona; Margalef-Bentabol, Berta; Primack, Joel; Rodriguez-Puebla, Aldo; Salvato, Mara; Shankar, Francesco; Tuccillo, Diego
2018-05-01
Understanding how bulges grow in galaxies is critical step towards unveiling the link between galaxy morphology and star-formation. To do so, it is necessary to decompose large sample of galaxies at different epochs into their main components (bulges and discs). This is particularly challenging, especially at high redshifts, where galaxies are poorly resolved. This work presents a catalog of bulge-disc decompositions of the surface brightness profiles of ˜17.600 H-band selected galaxies in the CANDELS fields (F160W < 23, 0 < z < 2) in 4 to 7 filters covering a spectral range of 430 - 1600nm. This is the largest available catalog of this kind up to z = 2. By using a novel approach based on deep-learning to select the best model to fit, we manage to control systematics arising from wrong model selection and obtain less contaminated samples than previous works. We show that the derived structural properties are within ˜10 - 20% of random uncertainties. We then fit stellar population models to the decomposed SEDs (Spectral Energy Distribution) of bulges and discs and derive stellar masses (and stellar mass bulge-to-total ratios) as well as rest-frame colors (U,V,J) for bulges and discs separately. All data products are publicly released with this paper and through the web page https://lerma.obspm.fr/huertas/form_CANDELS and will be used for scientific analysis in forthcoming works.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Rowe, Jamie Lynn; Duranko, Gary; Gorjian, Varoujan; Lineberger, Howard; Orr, Laura; Adewole, Ayomikun; Bradford, Eric; Douglas, Alea; Kohl, Steven; Larson, Lillia; Lascola, Gus; Orr, Quinton; Scott, Mekai; Walston, Joseph; Wang, Xian
2018-01-01
The Spitzer Enhanced Imaging Products catalog (SEIP) is a collection of nearly 42 million point sources obtained by the Spitzer Space Telescope during its 5+ year cryogenic mission. Strasburger et al (2014) isolated sources with a signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) >10 in five infrared (IR) wavelength channels (3.6, 4.5, 5.8, 8 and 24 microns) to begin a search for sources with infrared excess (IRXS). They found 76 objects that were never catalogued before. Based on this success, we intend to dig deeper into the catalog in an attempt to find more IRXS sources, specifically by lowering the SNR on the 3.6, 4.5, and 24 micron channels. The ultimate goal is to use this large sample to seek rare astrophysical sources that are transitional in nature and evolutionarily very important.Our filtering of the database at SNR > 5 yielded 461,000 sources. This was further evaluated and reduced to only the most interesting based on source location on a [3.6]-[4.5] vs [4.5]-[24] color-color diagram. We chose a sample of 985 extreme IRXS sources for further inspection. All of these candidate sources were visually inspected and cross-referenced against known sources in existing databases, resulting in a list of highly reliable IRXS sources.These sources will prove important in the study of galaxy and stellar evolution, and will serve as a starting point for further investigation.
Galaxy and Mass Assembly (GAMA): Mid-infrared Properties and Empirical Relations from WISE
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Cluver, M. E.; Jarrett, T. H.; Hopkins, A. M.; Driver, S. P.; Liske, J.; Gunawardhana, M. L. P.; Taylor, E. N.; Robotham, A. S. G.; Alpaslan, M.; Baldry, I.; Brown, M. J. I.; Peacock, J. A.; Popescu, C. C.; Tuffs, R. J.; Bauer, A. E.; Bland-Hawthorn, J.; Colless, M.; Holwerda, B. W.; Lara-López, M. A.; Leschinski, K.; López-Sánchez, A. R.; Norberg, P.; Owers, M. S.; Wang, L.; Wilkins, S. M.
2014-02-01
The Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) survey furnishes a deep redshift catalog that, when combined with the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE), allows us to explore for the first time the mid-infrared properties of >110, 000 galaxies over 120 deg2 to z ~= 0.5. In this paper we detail the procedure for producing the matched GAMA-WISE catalog for the G12 and G15 fields, in particular characterizing and measuring resolved sources; the complete catalogs for all three GAMA equatorial fields will be made available through the GAMA public releases. The wealth of multiwavelength photometry and optical spectroscopy allows us to explore empirical relations between optically determined stellar mass (derived from synthetic stellar population models) and 3.4 μm and 4.6 μm WISE measurements. Similarly dust-corrected Hα-derived star formation rates can be compared to 12 μm and 22 μm luminosities to quantify correlations that can be applied to large samples to z < 0.5. To illustrate the applications of these relations, we use the 12 μm star formation prescription to investigate the behavior of specific star formation within the GAMA-WISE sample and underscore the ability of WISE to detect star-forming systems at z ~ 0.5. Within galaxy groups (determined by a sophisticated friends-of-friends scheme), results suggest that galaxies with a neighbor within 100 h -1 kpc have, on average, lower specific star formation rates than typical GAMA galaxies with the same stellar mass.
A Multi-Purpose Data Dissemination Infrastructure for the Marine-Earth Observations
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hanafusa, Y.; Saito, H.; Kayo, M.; Suzuki, H.
2015-12-01
To open the data from a variety of observations, the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC) has developed a multi-purpose data dissemination infrastructure. Although many observations have been made in the earth science, all the data are not opened completely. We think data centers may provide researchers with a universal data dissemination service which can handle various kinds of observation data with little effort. For this purpose JAMSTEC Data Management Office has developed the "Information Catalog Infrastructure System (Catalog System)". This is a kind of catalog management system which can create, renew and delete catalogs (= databases) and has following features, - The Catalog System does not depend on data types or granularity of data records. - By registering a new metadata schema to the system, a new database can be created on the same system without sytem modification. - As web pages are defined by the cascading style sheets, databases have different look and feel, and operability. - The Catalog System provides databases with basic search tools; search by text, selection from a category tree, and selection from a time line chart. - For domestic users it creates the Japanese and English pages at the same time and has dictionary to control terminology and proper noun. As of August 2015 JAMSTEC operates 7 databases on the Catalog System. We expect to transfer existing databases to this system, or create new databases on it. In comparison with a dedicated database developed for the specific dataset, the Catalog System is suitable for the dissemination of small datasets, with minimum cost. Metadata held in the catalogs may be transfered to other metadata schema to exchange global databases or portals. Examples: JAMSTEC Data Catalog: http://www.godac.jamstec.go.jp/catalog/data_catalog/metadataList?lang=enJAMSTEC Document Catalog: http://www.godac.jamstec.go.jp/catalog/doc_catalog/metadataList?lang=en&tab=categoryResearch Information and Data Access Site of TEAMS: http://www.i-teams.jp/catalog/rias/metadataList?lang=en&tab=list
YOUNG STELLAR POPULATIONS IN MYStIX STAR-FORMING REGIONS: CANDIDATE PROTOSTARS
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Romine, Gregory; Feigelson, Eric D.; Getman, Konstantin V.
The Massive Young Star-Forming Complex in Infrared and X-ray (MYStIX) project provides a new census on stellar members of massive star-forming regions within 4 kpc. Here the MYStIX Infrared Excess catalog and Chandra -based X-ray photometric catalogs are mined to obtain high-quality samples of Class I protostars using criteria designed to reduce extragalactic and Galactic field star contamination. A total of 1109 MYStIX Candidate Protostars (MCPs) are found in 14 star-forming regions. Most are selected from protoplanetary disk infrared excess emission, but 20% are found from their ultrahard X-ray spectra from heavily absorbed magnetospheric flare emission. Two-thirds of the MCP sample ismore » newly reported here. The resulting samples are strongly spatially associated with molecular cores and filaments on Herschel far-infrared maps. This spatial agreement and other evidence indicate that the MCP sample has high reliability with relatively few “false positives” from contaminating populations. But the limited sensitivity and sparse overlap among the infrared and X-ray subsamples indicate that the sample is very incomplete with many “false negatives.” Maps, tables, and source descriptions are provided to guide further study of star formation in these regions. In particular, the nature of ultrahard X-ray protostellar candidates without known infrared counterparts needs to be elucidated.« less
Exploring the Milky Way halo with SDSS-II SN survey RR Lyrae stars
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
De Lee, Nathan
This thesis details the creation of a large catalog of RR Lyrae stars, their lightcurves, and their associated photometric and kinematic parameters. This catalog contains 421 RR Lyrae stars with 305 RRab and 116 RRc. Of these, 241 stars have stellar spectra taken with either the Blanco 4m RC spectrograph or the SDSS/SEGUE survey, and in some cases taken by both. From these spectra and photometric methods derived from them, an analysis is conducted of the RR lyrae's distribution, metallicity, kinematics, and photometric properties within the halo. All of these RR Lyrae originate from the SDSS-II Supernova Survey. The SDSS-II SN Survey covers a 2.5 degree equatorial stripe ranging from -60 to +60 degrees in RA. This corresponds to relatively high southern galactic latitudes in the anti-center direction. The full catalog ranges from g 0 magnitude 13 to 20 which covers a distance of 3 to 95 kpc from the sun. Using this sample, we explore the Oosterhoff dichotomy through the D log P method as a function of | Z | distance from the plane. This results in a clear division of the RRab stars into OoI and OoII groups at lower | Z |, but the population becomes dominated by OoI stars at higher | Z |. The idea of a dual halo is explored primarily in the context of radial velocity distributions as a function of | Z |. In particular, V gsr , the radial velocity in the galactic standard of rest, is used as a proxy for V [straight phi] , the cylindrical rotational velocity. This is then compared against a single halo model galaxy, which results in very similar V gsr histograms for both at low to medium | Z |. However, at high | Z | there is a clear separation into two distinct velocity groups for the data without a corresponding separation in the model, suggesting that at least a two-component model for the halo is necessary. The final part of the analysis involves [Fe/H] measurements from both spectra and photometric relations cut in both | Z | and radial velocity. In this case, there is less of a clear change as a function of these cuts, although that may be due to metallicity effects on the shape of the horizontal branch. The metallicity groups may be truncated at both the metal-rich and metal-poor end of the histograms because at those metallicities the horizontal branch stars may occur primarily out of the instability strip, removing them from our sample.