VPHAS+ survey synthetic colours Virtual Observatory Resource

Authors
  1. Drew J.E.
  2. Gonzalez-Solares E.
  3. Greimel R.
  4. Irwin M.J.
  5. Kupcu Yoldas A.,Lewis J.
  6. Barentsen G.
  7. Eisloffel J.
  8. Farnhill H.J.
  9. Martin W.E.,Walsh J.R.
  10. Walton N.A.
  11. Mohr-Smith M.
  12. Raddi R.
  13. Sale S.E.
  14. Wright N.J.,Groot P.
  15. Barlow M.J.
  16. Corradi R.L.M.
  17. Drake J.J.
  18. Fabregat J.
  19. Frew D.J.,Gansicke B.T.
  20. Knigge C.
  21. Mampaso A.
  22. Morris R.A.H.
  23. Naylor T.,Parker Q.A.
  24. Phillipps S.
  25. Ruhland C.
  26. Steeghs D.
  27. Unruh Y.C.
  28. Vink J.S.,Wesson R.
  29. Zijlstra A.A.
  30. Published by
    CDS
Abstract

The VST Photometric H{alpha} Survey of the Southern Galactic Plane and Bulge (VPHAS+) is surveying the southern Milky Way in u, g, r, i and H{alpha} at ~1arcsec angular resolution. Its footprint spans the Galactic latitude range -5{deg}<b<+5{deg} at all longitudes south of the celestial equator. Extensions around the Galactic Centre to Galactic latitudes +/-10{deg} bring in much of the Galactic bulge. This European Southern Observatory public survey, begun on 2011 December 28, reaches down to ~20th magnitude (10{sigma}) and will provide single-epoch digital optical photometry for ~300 million stars. The observing strategy and data pipelining are described, and an appraisal of the segmented narrow-band H{alpha} filter in use is presented. Using model atmospheres and library spectra, we compute main-sequence (u-g), (g-r), (r-i) and (r-H{alpha}) stellar colours in the Vega system. We report on a preliminary validation of the photometry using test data obtained from two pointings overlapping the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. An example of the (u-g, g-r) and (r-H{alpha}, r-i) diagrams for a full VPHAS+ survey field is given. Attention is drawn to the opportunities for studies of compact nebulae and nebular morphologies that arise from the image quality being achieved. The value of the u band as the means to identify planetary-nebula central stars is demonstrated by the discovery of the central star of NGC 2899 in survey data. Thanks to its excellent imaging performance, the VLT Survey Telescope (VST)/OmegaCam combination used by this survey is a perfect vehicle for automated searches for reddened early-type stars, and will allow the discovery and analysis of compact binaries, white dwarfs and transient sources.

Keywords
  1. astronomical-models
  2. visible-astronomy
  3. medium-band-photometry
  4. h-alpha-photometry
Bibliographic source Bibcode
2014MNRAS.440.2036D
See also HTML
https://cdsarc.cds.unistra.fr/viz-bin/cat/J/MNRAS/440/2036
IVOA Identifier IVOID
ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/440/2036
Document Object Identifer DOI
doi:10.26093/cds/vizier.74402036

Access

Web browser access HTML
http://vizier.cds.unistra.fr/viz-bin/VizieR-2?-source=J/MNRAS/440/2036
https://vizier.iucaa.in/viz-bin/VizieR-2?-source=J/MNRAS/440/2036
http://vizieridia.saao.ac.za/viz-bin/VizieR-2?-source=J/MNRAS/440/2036
IVOA Table Access TAP
http://tapvizier.cds.unistra.fr/TAPVizieR/tap
Run SQL-like queries with TAP-enabled clients (e.g., TOPCAT).

History

2016-05-17T12:42:48Z
Resource record created
2016-05-17T12:42:48Z
Created
2024-08-08T20:13:08Z
Updated

Contact

Name
CDS support team
Postal Address
CDS, Observatoire de Strasbourg, 11 rue de l'Universite, F-67000 Strasbourg, France
E-Mail
cds-question@unistra.fr