Calibration of the MACHO Photometry Database
Abstract
The MACHO Project is a microlensing survey that monitors the brightnesses of ~60 million stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), Small Magellanic Cloud, and Galactic bulge. Our database presently contains about 80 billion photometric measurements, a significant fraction of all astronomical photometry. We describe the calibration of MACHO two-color photometry and transformation to the standard Kron-Cousins V and R system. Calibrated MACHO photometry may be properly compared with all other observations on the Kron-Cousins standard system, enhancing the astrophysical value of these data. For ~9 million stars in the LMC bar, independent photometric measurements of ~20,000 stars with V<~18 mag in field-overlap regions demonstrate an internal precision σV=0.021, σR=0.019, σV-R=0.028 mag. The accuracy of the zero point in this calibration is estimated to be +/-0.035 mag for stars with colors in the range -0.1 mag<V-R<1.2 mag. A comparison of calibrated MACHO photometry with published photometric sequences and new Hubble Space Telescope observations shows agreement. The current calibration zero-point uncertainty for the remainder of the MACHO photometry database is estimated to be +/-0.10 mag in V or R and +/-0.04 mag in V-R. We describe the first application of calibrated MACHO data: the construction of a color-magnitude diagram used to calculate our experimental sensitivity for detecting microlensing in the LMC.
- Publication:
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Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific
- Pub Date:
- December 1999
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:astro-ph/9909227
- Bibcode:
- 1999PASP..111.1539A
- Keywords:
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- METHODS: DATA ANALYSIS;
- SURVEYS;
- TECHNIQUES: PHOTOMETRIC;
- Astrophysics
- E-Print:
- to appear in PASP, 11pt aaspp4.sty, 47 pages, includes 21 figures (4 are bitmapped)