VizieR Online Data Catalog: Solar neighborhood. XXXIX. Nearby white dwarfs (Subasavage+, 2017)
Abstract
Standardized photometric observations were carried out at three separate telescopes.
The Small & Moderate Aperture Research Telescope System (SMARTS) 0.9m telescope at Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory (CTIO) was used during Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory Parallax Investigation (CTIOPI) observing runs when conditions were photometric. A Tektronics 2K*2K detector was used in region-of-interest mode centered on the central quarter of the full CCD producing a Field Of View (FOV) of 6.8'*6.8'. The SMARTS 1.0m telescope at CTIO was used with the Y4KCam 4K*4K imager, producing a 19.7'*19.7' FOV. Finally, the Ritchey 40-in telescope at USNO Flagstaff Station (NOFS) was used with a Tektronics 2K*2K detector with a 20.0'*20.0' FOV. Near-infrared JHKs photometry was collected for WD0851-246, at the CTIO 4.0 m Blanco telescope using the NEWFIRM during an engineering night on 2011.27 UT. National Optical Astronomy Observatory (NOAO) Extremely Wide-field Infrared Image (NEWFIRM) is a 4K*4K InSb mosaic that provides a 28'*28' FOV on the Blanco telescope. Additional photometry values were extracted from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) DR12 (Alam et al. 2015, Cat. V/147), 2MASS, and the United Kingdom Infra-Red Telescope (UKIRT) Infrared Sky Survey (UKIDSS) DR9 Large Area Survey (LAS; see Lawrence et al. 2012, Cat. II/319), when available. Two White Dwarfs (WDs) presented here (WD1743-545 and WD2057-493) are newly discovered nearby WDs identified during a spectroscopic survey of WD candidates in the southern hemisphere (J. Subasavage et al. 2017, in preparation) taken from the SUPERBLINK catalog (Lepine & Shara 2015ASPC..493..455S). A third WD included here (WD2307-691) was previously unclassified, yet is a common proper-motion companion to a Hipparcos star within 25pc (HIP114416). A fourth WD (WD2028-171) was suspected to be a WD by the authors based on a trawl of the New Luyten Two Tenths (NLTT) catalog (Luyten 1979, Cat. I/98). Finally, a fifth WD (WD1241-798) was first spectroscopically identified as a WD by Subasavage et al. (2008AJ....136..899S; Paper XX) but with an ambiguous spectral type of DC/DQ. The SOuthern Astrophysical Research (SOAR) 4m telescope with the Goodman spectrograph was used for spectroscopic follow up as part of a larger spectroscopic campaign to identify nearby WDs to be released in a future publication. Observations were taken with a 600 lines-per-mm VPH grating with a 1.0'' slit width to provide 2.1Å resolution in wavelength range of 3600Å-6200Å. Trigonometric parallax data acquisition and reduction techniques for the CTIOPI program are discussed fully in Jao et al. (2005AJ....129.1954J). In brief, the instrument setup and basic data calibrations are identical to those used for photometric observations (i.e., the SMARTS 0.9m telescope coupled with the central quarter of a Tektronics 2K*2K detector). A parallax target's reference field is determined upon first observation. We use one of the Johnson-Kron-Cousins VRI filters, selected to optimize the signal on the PI star and reference stars (the parallax filter), as well as to keep exposure times greater than ~30s and less than ~600s, when possible. Because of a damaged Tek 2 V filter (referred to as oV) that occurred in early 2005, the CTIOPI program used a comparable V filter (referred to as nV) from 2005 to mid-2009. The astrometry is affected by this change because the passbands were slightly different. It was determined empirically that trigonometric parallax determinations are sound if at least ~1-2 years of data are available both before and after the filter switch. However, subtle signals from a perturbing companion would not be reliable. In 2009, it was determined that the crack near the corner of the filter did not impact the FOV of the CTIOPI data, as only the central quarter of the CCD is used. Thus, a switch back to the original V (oV) was completed in mid-2009. U. S. Naval Observatory Flagstaff Station (NOFS) astrometric data have been collected with the Kaj Strand 61-in Astrometric Reflector using three separate CCDs over the multiple decades that NOFS has measured stellar parallaxes. Initially, a Texas Instruments (TI) 800*800 (TI800) CCD, followed by a Tektronics 2048*2048 (Tek2K) CCD, and most recently an EEV (English Electric Valve, now e2v) 2048*4096 (EEV24) CCD were used. The latter two cameras are still in operation at NOFS for astrometric work and were used for all but two of the NOFS parallaxes presented here. The TI800 CCD was used to measure the parallaxes for WD0213+396 and WD1313-198. A total of four filters were used for astrometric work. ST-R (also known as STWIDER) is centered near 700nm with a FWHM of 250nm. A2-1 is an optically flat interference filter centered near 698nm with a FWHM of 172nm. I-2 is an optically flat interference filter centered near 810nm with a FWHM of 191nm. Z-2 is an optically flat 3mm thick piece of Schott RG830 glass that produces a relatively sharp blue-edge cutoff near 830nm and for which the red edge is defined by the CCD sensitivity. More details on the filters can be found in C. Dahn et al. (2017, in preparation). (8 data files).- Publication:
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VizieR Online Data Catalog
- Pub Date:
- October 2017
- DOI:
- 10.26093/cds/vizier.51540032
- Bibcode:
- 2017yCat..51540032S
- Keywords:
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- Stars: white dwarf;
- Stars: nearby;
- Parallaxes: trigonometric;
- Photometry: UBVRI;
- Photometry: infrared;
- Positional data;
- Spectral types;
- Proper motions;
- Stars: masses;
- Effective temperatures