Conrad R. Sturch
Space Telescope Science Institute
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The Astronomical Journal | 2008
Barry M. Lasker; M. G. Lattanzi; B. J. McLean; B. Bucciarelli; Ronald Drimmel; Jorge M. Garcia; Gretchen R. Greene; Fabrizia Guglielmetti; Christopher J. Hanley; George William Hawkins; Victoria G. Laidler; Charles Loomis; Michael G. Meakes; Roberto P. Mignani; R. Morbidelli; Jane E. Morrison; Renato Pannunzio; Amy Rosenberg; Maria Sarasso; Alessandro Spagna; Conrad R. Sturch; Antonio Volpicelli; Richard L. White; David Wolfe; Andrea Zacchei
The Guide Star Catalog II (GSC-II) is an all-sky database of objects derived from the uncompressed Digitized Sky Surveys that the Space Telescope Science Institute has created from the Palomar and UK Schmidt survey plates and made available to the community. Like its predecessor (GSC-I), the GSC-II was primarily created to provide guide star information and observation planning support for Hubble Space Telescope. This version, however, is already employed at some of the ground-based new-technology telescopes such as GEMINI, VLT, and TNG, and will also be used to provide support for the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) and GAIA space missions as well as the Large Sky Area Multi-Object Fiber Spectroscopic Telescope, one of the major ongoing scientific projects in China. Two catalogs have already been extracted from the GSC-II database and released to the astronomical community. A magnitude-limited (RF = 18.0) version, GSC2.2, was distributed soon after its production in 2001, while the GSC2.3 release has been available for general access since 2007. The GSC2.3 catalog described in this paper contains astrometry, photometry, and classification for 945,592,683 objects down to the magnitude limit of the plates. Positions are tied to the International Celestial Reference System; for stellar sources, the all-sky average absolute error per coordinate ranges from 02 to 028 depending on magnitude. When dealing with extended objects, astrometric errors are 20% worse in the case of galaxies and approximately a factor of 2 worse for blended images. Stellar photometry is determined to 0.13-0.22 mag as a function of magnitude and photographic passbands (RF , BJ , IN ). Outside of the galactic plane, stellar classification is reliable to at least 90% confidence for magnitudes brighter than RF = 19.5, and the catalog is complete to RF = 20.
The Astronomical Journal | 1993
Mario Hamuy; Jose Manuel Campillos Maza; Mark M. Phillips; Nicholas B. Suntzeff; M. Wischnjewsky; Ryan Christopher Smith; R. Antezana; Lisa A. Wells; L. E. González; P. Gigoux; M. Navarrete; Felipe Barrientos; R. Lamontagne; M. Della Valle; J. E. Elias; Andrew C. Phillips; S. C. Odewahn; J. A. Baldwin; Alistair R. Walker; T. B. Williams; Conrad R. Sturch; F. K. Baganoff; Brian Chaboyer; Robert A. Schommer; H. Tirado; M. Hernandez; P. Ugarte; Puragra Guhathakurta; Steve B. Howell; Paula Szkody
We have started a search for supernovae as a collaboration between the University of Chile and the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory, with the aim of producing a moderately distant (0.01<z<0.10) sample of Type Ia and Type II supernovae suitable for cosmological studies. The project began in mid-1990 and continues to the present. This paper reports on the Calan/Tololo discoveries in the course of 1990, and on the spectroscopic and photometric observations gathered for these objects. All of these observations were obtained with CCDs, with the extensive collaboration of visiting astronomers. Great care was exercised in the reduction of the light curves in order to properly correct for the background light of the host galaxy of each supernova
The Astrophysical Journal | 2001
Alejandro Clocchiatti; Nicholas B. Suntzeff; Mark M. Phillips; Alexei V. Filippenko; Massimo Turatto; Stefano Benetti; E. Cappellaro; Roberto Aviles; Ricardo Alberto Covarrubias; Kathleen DeGioia-Eastwood; Mark Dickinson; C. Gouiffes; Puragra Guhathakurta; Mario Hamuy; Steve Heathcote; Bruno Leibundgut; Thomas Matheson; M. Navarrete; M. Perez; Andrew C. Phillips; Antonello Piemonte; Maria Teresa Ruiz; Joseph C. Shields; Chris Smith; Hyron Spinrad; Conrad R. Sturch; J. Anthony Tyson; Lisa A. Wells
We present a study of the Type Ic supernova (SN) 1990B that includes most of the observations obtained from around the world. The combined data set comprises 84 BV(RI)c photometric points spanning approximately 360 days after maximum light and 14 spectra from 5 up to ~150 days after maximum light. In contrast to other Type Ic SNe, SN 1990B did not display a weak but distinct He I λ5876 line indicating that its He content was smaller or that the He layers were rather effectively shielded from the radioactive matter in the ejecta. The behavior of the Na I D line, however, suggests that He I λ5876 was blended with it. SN 1990B appeared on a sharply varying background that complicates the usual techniques of digital photometry. In order to do unbiased photometry, we modeled and subtracted the background of each image with the SN using images of NGC 4568 taken ~2500 days after the explosion, when SN 1990B had faded beyond detection. We compare the performance of standard point-spread function fitting photometry of the SN in the images with and without the background of the parent galaxy and find the results to differ systematically at late times. The photometry done on the images with the background light of NGC 4568 subtracted shows the light curves of SN 1990B to be of the slow Type Ic variety, with a slope steeper than that of the Type Ib SN 1983N or the Type II transition (Type IIb) SN 1993J but slower than that of the Type Ic SN 1994I. We estimate the reddening by foreground matter in the Galaxy and NGC 4568 and compute BV(RI)c light curves spanning ~110 days after maximum light.
The Astronomical Journal | 1989
Wayne H. Warren; Conrad R. Sturch; Barry M. Lasker; Hartmut Jahreiss; Willem J. Luyten
An optically scanning data-entry machine and various manual techniques are used to digitize the NLTT Catalogue and the first supplement to the NLTT Catalogue. Included in the catalog are stars found on over 800 Palomar proper-motion survey plates to have relative annual proper motions exceeding 0.18 arcsec. The supplement contains data for 398 stars having motions larger than 0.179 arcsec annually.
The Astronomical Journal | 1990
Barry M. Lasker; Michael M. Shara; J. L. Russell; B. J. McLean; Conrad R. Sturch; H. Jenkner
The Astronomical Journal | 1990
J. L. Russell; Barry M. Lasker; B. J. McLean; Conrad R. Sturch; H. Jenkner
Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 1988
Barry M. Lasker; Conrad R. Sturch; Carlos F. Lopez; Anthony D. Mallamas; Steven F. McLaughlin; J. L. Russell; Wieslaw Z. Wisniewski; Bruce Gillespie; H. Jenkner; Elizabeth D. Siciliano; Deborah Kenny; John H. Baumert; Alan M. Goldberg; Gregory W. Henry; Edward Kemper; Michael J. Siegel
The Astronomical Journal | 1990
H. Jenkner; Barry M. Lasker; Conrad R. Sturch; B. J. McLean; Michael M. Shara; J. L. Russel
The Astrophysical Journal | 1990
L. G. Taff; M. G. Lattanzi; Beatrice Bucciarelli; R. Gilmozzi; B. J. Mclean; H. Jenkner; Victoria G. Laidler; Barry M. Lasker; Michael M. Shara; Conrad R. Sturch
The Astronomical Journal | 1969
Conrad R. Sturch