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The Astronomical Journal | 1995

A Radio Reference Frame

K. J. Johnston; Alan Lee Fey; N. Zacharias; J. L. Russell; C. Ma; C. de Vegt; J. E. Reynolds; Dl Jauncey; Brent A. Archinal; M. S. Carter; T. E. Corbin; T. M. Eubanks; D. R. Florkowski; D. M. Hall; David D. McCarthy; P. M. McCulloch; E. A. King; G. D. Nicolson; D. B. Shaffer

A catalogue is presented based on the radio positions of 436 extragalactic sources distributed over the entire sky. The positional accuracy of the sources is better than 3 milliarcsec (mas) in both coordinates, with the majority of the sources having errors better than 1 mas. This catalogue is based upon a general solution of all applicable dual frequency 2.3 and 8.4 GHz Mark-III VLBI data available through the end of 1993 consisting of 1,015,292 pairs of group delay and phase delay rate observations. Details and positions are also given for an additional 124 objects that either need further observation or are currently unsuitable for the definition of a reference frame. The final orientation of the catalogue has been obtained by a rotation of the positions into the system of the International Earth Rotation Service and is consistent with the FK5 J2000.0 optical system, within the limits of the link accuracy.


The Astronomical Journal | 1990

A radio optical reference frame. I - Precise radio source positions determined by Mark III VLBI - Observations from 1979 to 1988 and a tie to the FK5

C. Ma; D. B. Shaffer; C. de Vegt; K. J. Johnston; J. L. Russell

Observations from 600 Mark III VLBI experiments from 1979 to 1988, resulting in 237,681 acceptable pairs of group delay and phase delay rate observations, have been used to derive positions of 182 extragalactic radio sources with typical formal standard errors less than 1 mas. The sources are distributed fairly evenly above delta = -30 deg, and 70 sources have delta greater than 0 deg. Analysis with different troposphere models, as well as internal and external comparisons, indicates that a coordinate frame defined by this set of radio sources should be reliable at the 1 mas level. The right ascension zero point of this reference frame has been aligned with the FK5 by using the optical positions of 28 extragalactic radio sources whose positions are on the FK5 system. Because of known defects in the knowledge of astronomical constants, daily nutation offsets in longitude and obliquity were determined relative to an arbitrary reference day in the set of experiments. 30 refs.


The Astronomical Journal | 1991

A radio optical reference frame. II ; Additional radio and optical source positions in the northern hemisphere

J. L. Russell; K. J. Johnston; C. Ma; D. B. Shaffer; C. de Vegt

VLBI observations from 12 sessions have been made of a total of 103 sources north of {minus}2 deg declination. These data give the first extension to the radio/optical reference frame catalog already defined by the data in the NASA Crustal Dynamics Project database prior to July 1988. The new observations add 53 new sources to the radio reference frame catalog, improve the positions of 29 from the previous version, and show another seven sources to be unsuitable reference frame objects. Observations of 14 calibration sources tie the new positions to the existing catalog. The formal mean errors for the radio positions of the additional sources are about 0.8 mas in each coordinate. Optical positions for eight sources have been measured in the FK5 system, bringing the total number of sources in the catalog with accurate positions for their optical counterparts to 36. The new optical positions have an accuracy of about 50 mas. 21 refs.


The Astronomical Journal | 1994

A radio/optical reference frame. 5: Additional source positions in the mid-latitude southern hemisphere

J. L. Russell; J. E. Reynolds; Dl Jauncey; C. de Vegt; N. Zacharias; C. Ma; Alan Lee Fey; K. J. Johnston; R. B. Hindsley; Joseph L. A. Hughes

We report new accurate radio position measurements for 30 sources, preliminary positions for two sources, improved radio postions for nine additional sources which had limited previous observations, and optical positions and optical-radio differences for six of the radio sources. The Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) observations are part of the continuing effort to establish a global radio reference frame of about 400 compact, flat spectrum sources, which are evenly distributed across the sky. The observations were made using Mark III data format in four separate sessions in 1988-89 with radio telescopes at Tidbinbilla, Australia, Kauai, USA, and Kashima, Japan. We observed a total of 54 sources, including ten calibrators and three which were undetected. The 32 new source positions bring the total number in the radio reference frame catalog to 319 (172 northern and 147 southern) and fill in the zone -25 deg greater than delta greater than -45 deg which, prior to this list, had the lowest source density. The VLBI positions have an average formal precision of less than 1 mas, although unknown radio structure effects of about 1-2 mas may be present. The six new optical postion measurements are part of the program to obtain positions of the optical counterparts of the radio reference frame source and to map accurately the optical on to the radio reference frames. The optical measurements were obtained from United States Naval Observatory (USNO) Black Birch astrograph plates and source plates from the AAT, and Kitt Peak National Observatory (KPNO) 4 m, and the European Southern Observatory (ESO) Schmidt. The optical positions have an average precision of 0.07 sec, mostly due to the zero point error when adjusted to the FK5 optical frame using the IRS catalog. To date we have measured optical positions for 46 sources.


The Astronomical Journal | 1994

Radio optical reference frame. 6: Additional source positions in the northern hemisphere

Alan Lee Fey; J. L. Russell; C. de Vegt; N. Zacharias; K. J. Johnston; C. Ma; D. M. Hall; E. R. Holdenried

Radio and optical positions for northern hemisphere extragalactic sources are reported. Milliarcsecond (mas) accurate radio positions of 106 sources north of -2 deg declination are derived from Mark III Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) observations taken during ten experiments from 1990 January through 1990 October. The results presented supplement an ongoing project to define and maintain an all-sky radio/optical reference frame of 400 or more extragalactic sources with mas accurate radio and optical positions. Radio positions for 34 new sources are presented along with improved radio positions for 72 sources already in the reference frame catalog. An additional nine sources have been determined to be unsuitable reference frame objects. Radio observations of nine calibration sources tie the new positions to the existing catalogue. The radio positions of the new sources have formal mean errors of approximately 0.7 mas in right ascension and approximately 1.0 mas in declination. Sources for which we report improved radio positions now have formal mean errors of approximately 0.5 mas in both coordinates, an improvement in some cases by as much as 75%. Positions in the FK5 system have also been obtained for the optical counterparts of an additional five northern hemisphere radio sources using prime focus plates from the Kitt Peak National Observatorys 4 m telescope and a Ritchey-Chretien focus plate from the Calar Alto 2.2 m telescope. The optical positions have internal accuracies of about 0.03 sec and differ from the radio positions by about 0.07 sec on the average.


The Astronomical Journal | 1992

A radio optical reference frame. IV : Additional radio source positions in the northern hemisphere

Alan Lee Fey; J. L. Russell; C. Ma; K. J. Johnston; Brent A. Archinal; M. S. Carter; E. R. Holdenried; Z. Yao; C. de Vegt; N. Zacharias

Seventy-seven extragalactic radio sources north of -2° declination have been observed using Mark III Very-Long Baseline Interferometry during 13 experiments from 1988 October to 1989 November. Radio positions derived from these observations supplement an ongoing project to define and maintain an all-sky radio/optical reference frame of 400 or more extragalactic sources with milliarcsecond (mas) accurate radio and optical positions. Positions for 11 new sources are presented along with improved positions for 54 sources already in the reference-frame catalog. An additional five sources have been determined to be unsuitable reference-frame objects


International Astronomical Union Colloquium | 1991

The Extragalactic Radio/Optical Reference Frame

K. J. Johnston; J. L. Russell; Christian de Vegt; N. Zacharias; R. B. Hindsley; Joseph L. A. Hughes; Dl Jauncey; J. E. Reynolds; G. Nicholson; C. Ma


Archive | 1992

The radio reference frame-source selection

J. L. Russell; Ch. de Vegt; Dl Jauncey; K. J. Johnston; C. Ma; J. E. Reynolds


Archive | 1991

The radio reference frame - progress to data.

J. L. Russell; Ch. de Vegt; Dl Jauncey; K. J. Johnston; C. Ma; J. E. Reynolds


International Astronomical Union Colloquium | 1991

Southern Hemisphere VLBI Astometry

J. E. Reynolds; Dl Jauncey; K. J. Johnston; J. L. Russell; G. D. Nicolson; Gl White; C. de Vegt; C. Ma

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J. L. Russell

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Dl Jauncey

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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D. B. Shaffer

Goddard Space Flight Center

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R. B. Hindsley

United States Naval Research Laboratory

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G. D. Nicolson

Hartebeesthoek Radio Astronomy Observatory

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