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Featured researches published by R. Drimmel.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016

Gaia Data Release 1 - Astrometry: one billion positions, two million proper motions and parallaxes

Lennart Lindegren; Uwe Lammers; U. Bastian; Jonay I. González Hernández; Sergei A. Klioner; David Hobbs; A. Bombrun; Daniel Michalik; M. Ramos-Lerate; A. G. Butkevich; G. Comoretto; E. Joliet; B. Holl; A. Hutton; P. Parsons; H. Steidelmüller; U. Abbas; M. Altmann; A. H. Andrei; S. Anton; N. Bach; C. Barache; Ugo Becciani; Jerome Berthier; Luciana Bianchi; M. Biermann; S. Bouquillon; G. Bourda; T. Brüsemeister; Beatrice Bucciarelli

Gaia Data Release 1 (Gaia DR1) contains astrometric results for more than 1 billion stars brighter than magnitude 20.7 based on observations collected by the Gaia satellite during the first 14 months of its operational phase. We give a brief overview of the astrometric content of the data release and of the model assumptions, data processing, and validation of the results. For stars in common with the Hipparcos and Tycho-2 catalogues, complete astrometric single-star solutions are obtained by incorporating positional information from the earlier catalogues. For other stars only their positions are obtained by neglecting their proper motions and parallaxes. The results are validated by an analysis of the residuals, through special validation runs, and by comparison with external data. Results. For about two million of the brighter stars (down to magnitude ~11.5) we obtain positions, parallaxes, and proper motions to Hipparcos-type precision or better. For these stars, systematic errors depending e.g. on position and colour are at a level of 0.3 milliarcsecond (mas). For the remaining stars we obtain positions at epoch J2015.0 accurate to ~10 mas. Positions and proper motions are given in a reference frame that is aligned with the International Celestial Reference Frame (ICRF) to better than 0.1 mas at epoch J2015.0, and non-rotating with respect to ICRF to within 0.03 mas/yr. The Hipparcos reference frame is found to rotate with respect to the Gaia DR1 frame at a rate of 0.24 mas/yr. Based on less than a quarter of the nominal mission length and on very provisional and incomplete calibrations, the quality and completeness of the astrometric data in Gaia DR1 are far from what is expected for the final mission products. The results nevertheless represent a huge improvement in the available fundamental stellar data and practical definition of the optical reference frame.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2001

Three-dimensional Structure of the Milky Way Disk: The Distribution of Stars and Dust beyond 0.35 R☉

R. Drimmel; David N. Spergel

We present a three-dimensional model for the Milky Way fitted to the far-infrared (FIR) and near-infrared (NIR) data from the COBE/DIRBE instrument for Galactic latitudes |b| < 30° and to within 20° of the Galactic center. Because of the low optical depth at 240 μm, the FIR emission traces the distribution of Galactic dust in the Galaxy. We model the dust distribution as due to three components: a warped exponential disk with scale length 0.28 R☉ and a flaring scale height, a spiral arm component with four arms as traced by Galactic H II regions, and the local (Orion) arm, which produces prominent emission features at Galactic longitudes l 80 and -100°. A cosmic infrared background of 1.07 MJy sr-1 is recovered, consistent with previous determinations. The dust distribution is then used to calculate absorption in J and K, and the stellar emission in these wavebands is modeled with two components: a warped exponential disk with a scale length of 0.28 R☉ and a spiral arm component dominated by two arms. This small scale length is consistent with a maximal disk model for our Galaxy, which is inconsistent with the cuspy dark matter halos predicted in CDM models. We find different amplitudes for the warp in the stars and dust, which starts within the solar circle.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2003

A three-dimensional Galactic extinction model

R. Drimmel; A. Cabrera-Lavers; M. Lopez-Corredoira

A large-scale three-dimensional model of Galactic extinction is presented based on the Galactic dust distribution model of Drimmel & Spergel (2001). The extinction A V to any point within the Galactic disk can be quickly deduced using a set of three-dimensional Cartesian grids. Extinctions from the model are compared to empirical extinction measures, including lines-of-sight in and near the Galactic plane using optical and NIR extinction measures: in particular we show how extinction can be derived from NIR color-magnitude diagrams in the Galactic plane to a distance of 8 kiloparsec.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2012

Gaia Universe model snapshot - A statistical analysis of the expected contents of the Gaia catalogue

A. C. Robin; X. Luri; C. Reylé; Y. Isasi; E. Grux; S. Blanco-Cuaresma; F. Arenou; C. Babusiaux; M. Belcheva; R. Drimmel; C. Jordi; A. Krone-Martins; E. Masana; J. C. Mauduit; F. Mignard; Nami Mowlavi; Brigitte Rocca-Volmerange; P. Sartoretti; Eric Slezak; A. Sozzetti

Context. This study has been developed in the framework of the computational simulations that are executed for the preparation of the ESA Gaia astrometric mission. Aims. We focus on describing the objects and characteristics that Gaia will potentially observe without taking into consideration instrumental effects (detection efficiency, observing errors). Methods. The theoretical Universe model prepared for the Gaia simulation has been statistically analysed at a given time. Ingredients of the model are described, with the greatest emplasis on the stellar content, the double and multiple stars, and variability. Results. In this simulation the errors have not yet been included. Hence we estimated the number of objects and their theoretical photometric, astrometric and spectroscopic characteristics if they are perfectly detected. We show that Gaia will be able to potentially observe 1.1 billion of stars (single or part of multiple star systems) of which about 2% are variable stars and 3% have one or two exoplanets. At the extragalactic level, observations will be potentially composed of several millions of galaxies, half a million to 1 million quasars and about 50 000 supernovae that will occur during the five years of the mission.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2018

Gaia Data Release 2 - The astrometric solution

Lennart Lindegren; Jonay I. González Hernández; A. Bombrun; Sergei A. Klioner; U. Bastian; M. Ramos-Lerate; A. De Torres; H. Steidelmüller; C. Stephenson; David Hobbs; Uwe Lammers; M. Biermann; R. Geyer; T. Hilger; Daniel Michalik; U. Stampa; Paul J. McMillan; J. Castañeda; M. Clotet; G. Comoretto; M. Davidson; C. Fabricius; G. Gracia; Nigel Hambly; A. Hutton; André Mora; J. Portell; F. van Leeuwen; U. Abbas; A. Abreu

Context. Gaia Data Release 2 (Gaia DR2) contains results for 1693 million sources in the magnitude range 3 to 21 based on observations collected by the European Space Agency Gaia satellite during the first 22 months of its operational phase. Aims. We describe the input data, models, and processing used for the astrometric content of Gaia DR2, and the validation of these resultsperformed within the astrometry task. Methods. Some 320 billion centroid positions from the pre-processed astrometric CCD observations were used to estimate the five astrometric parameters (positions, parallaxes, and proper motions) for 1332 million sources, and approximate positions at the reference epoch J2015.5 for an additional 361 million mostly faint sources. These data were calculated in two steps. First, the satellite attitude and the astrometric calibration parameters of the CCDs were obtained in an astrometric global iterative solution for 16 million selected sources, using about 1% of the input data. This primary solution was tied to the extragalactic International Celestial Reference System (ICRS) by means of quasars. The resulting attitude and calibration were then used to calculate the astrometric parameters of all the sources. Special validation solutions were used to characterise the random and systematic errors in parallax and proper motion. Results. For the sources with five-parameter astrometric solutions, the median uncertainty in parallax and position at the reference epoch J2015.5 is about 0.04 mas for bright (G < 14 mag) sources, 0.1 mas at G = 17 mag, and 0.7 masat G = 20 mag. In the proper motion components the corresponding uncertainties are 0.05, 0.2, and 1.2 mas yr−1, respectively.The optical reference frame defined by Gaia DR2 is aligned with ICRS and is non-rotating with respect to the quasars to within 0.15 mas yr−1. From the quasars and validation solutions we estimate that systematics in the parallaxes depending on position, magnitude, and colour are generally below 0.1 mas, but the parallaxes are on the whole too small by about 0.03 mas. Significant spatial correlations of up to 0.04 mas in parallax and 0.07 mas yr−1 in proper motion are seen on small (< 1 deg) and intermediate (20 deg) angular scales. Important statistics and information for the users of the Gaia DR2 astrometry are given in the appendices.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2013

The Gaia astrophysical parameters inference system (Apsis) - Pre-launch description

Coryn A. L. Bailer-Jones; R. Andrae; Bernardino Arcay; T. L. Astraatmadja; I. Bellas-Velidis; A. Berihuete; A. Bijaoui; Claire Carrion; Carlos Dafonte; Y. Damerdji; A. Dapergolas; P. de Laverny; L. Delchambre; P. Drazinos; R. Drimmel; Y. Frémat; Diego Fustes; M. García-Torres; C. Guede; Ulrike Heiter; A.-M. Janotto; A. Karampelas; Dae-Won Kim; Jens Knude; I. Kolka; E. Kontizas; M. Kontizas; A. Korn; Alessandro C. Lanzafame; Yveline Lebreton

The Gaia satellite will survey the entire celestial sphere down to 20th magnitude, obtaining astrometry, photometry, and low resolution spectrophotometry on one billion astronomical sources, plus radial velocities for over one hundred million stars. Its main objective is to take a census of the stellar content of our Galaxy, with the goal of revealing its formation and evolution. Gaias unique feature is the measurement of parallaxes and proper motions with hitherto unparalleled accuracy for many objects. As a survey, the physical properties of most of these objects are unknown. Here we describe the data analysis system put together by the Gaia consortium to classify these objects and to infer their astrophysical properties using the satellites data. This system covers single stars, (unresolved) binary stars, quasars, and galaxies, all covering a wide parameter space. Multiple methods are used for many types of stars, producing multiple results for the end user according to different models and assumptions. Prior to its application to real Gaia data the accuracy of these methods cannot be assessed definitively. But as an example of the current performance, we can attain internal accuracies (RMS residuals) on F,G,K,M dwarfs and giants at G=15 (V=15-17) for a wide range of metallicites and interstellar extinctions of around 100K in effective temperature (Teff), 0.1mag in extinction (A0), 0.2dex in metallicity ([Fe/H]), and 0.25dex in surface gravity (logg). The accuracy is a strong function of the parameters themselves, varying by a factor of more than two up or down over this parameter range. After its launch in November 2013, Gaia will nominally observe for five years, during which the system we describe will continue to evolve in light of experience with the real data.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2006

The design and performance of the Gaia photometric system

C. Jordi; Erik Høg; Anthony G. A. Brown; Lennart Lindegren; Coryn A. L. Bailer-Jones; J. M. Carrasco; Jens Knude; V. Straižys; J. H. J. de Bruijne; Jean-François Claeskens; R. Drimmel; F. Figueras; M. Grenon; I. Kolka; M. A. C. Perryman; G. Tautvaišiene; V. Vansevicius; Philip Willemsen; A. Bridžius; D. W. Evans; C. Fabricius; M. Fiorucci; Ulrike Heiter; T. A. Kaempf; A. Kazlauskas; A. Kucinskas; V. Malyuto; Ulisse Munari; C. Reylé; J. Torra

The European Gaia astrometry mission is due for launch in 2011. Gaia will rely on the proven principles of the ESA Hipparcos mission to create an all-sky survey of about one billion stars throughout our Galaxy and beyond, by observing all objects down to 20 mag. Through its massive measurement of stellar distances, motions and multicolour photometry, it will provide fundamental data necessary for unravelling the structure, formation and evolution of the Galaxy. This paper presents the design and performance of the broad- and medium-band set of photometric filters adopted as the baseline for Gaia. The 19 selected passbands (extending from the UV to the far-red), the criteria and the methodology on which this choice has been based are discussed in detail. We analyse the photometric capabilities for characterizing the luminosity, temperature, gravity and chemical composition of stars. We also discuss the automatic determination of these physical parameters for the large number of observations involved, for objects located throughout the entire Hertzsprung-Russell diagram. Finally, the capability of the photometric system (PS) to deal with the main Gaia science case is outlined.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2003

The Torino Observatory Parallax Program: White dwarf candidates

R. L. Smart; M. G. Lattanzi; Beatrice Bucciarelli; G. Massone; R. Casalegno; G. Chiumiento; R. Drimmel; L. Lanteri; F. Marocco; A. Spagna

We present parallax determinations for six white dwarf candidates in the Torino Observatory Parallax Program. The absolute parallaxes are found with precisions at the 2-3 milliarcsec level. For WD 1126+185 we find a distance incompatible with being a white dwarf, implying an incorrect classification. For WD 2216+484 we find our distance is consistent with a simple DA white dwarf rather than a composite system as previously proposed in the literature. In general it is found that the published photometric distance is an overestimate of the distance found here.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2018

Gaia Data Release 2. Mapping the Milky Way disc kinematics

D. Katz; T. Antoja; Manuel Romero Gómez; R. Drimmel; C. Reylé; G. M. Seabroke; C. Soubiran; C. Babusiaux; P. Di Matteo; F. Figueras; E. Poggio; A. C. Robin; D. W. Evans; A. G. A. Brown; A. Vallenari; T. Prusti; J. H. J. de Bruijne; Coryn A. L. Bailer-Jones; M. Biermann; Ruth Carballo Fidalgo

Context. The second Gaia data release (Gaia DR2) contains high-precision positions, parallaxes, and proper motions for 1.3 billion sources as well as line-of-sight velocities for 7.2 million stars brighter than GRVS = 12 mag. Both samples provide a full sky coverage. Aims. To illustrate the potential of Gaia DR2, we provide a first look at the kinematics of the Milky Way disc, within a radius of several kiloparsecs around the Sun. Methods. We benefit for the first time from a sample of 6.4 million F-G-K stars with full 6D phase-space coordinates, precise parallaxes (σω/ω/≤ 20%), and precise Galactic cylindrical velocities (median uncertainties of 0.9-1.4 km s-1 and 20% of the stars with uncertainties smaller than 1 km s-1 on all three components). From this sample, we extracted a sub-sample of 3.2 million giant stars to map the velocity field of the Galactic disc from ∼5 kpc to ∼13 kpc from the Galactic centre and up to 2 kpc above and below the plane. We also study the distribution of 0.3 million solar neighbourhood stars (r < 200 pc), with median velocity uncertainties of 0.4 km s-1, in velocity space and use the full sample to examine how the over-densities evolve in more distant regions. Results. Gaia DR2 allows us to draw 3D maps of the Galactocentric median velocities and velocity dispersions with unprecedented accuracy, precision, and spatial resolution. The maps show the complexity and richness of the velocity field of the galactic disc. We observe streaming motions in all the components of the velocities as well as patterns in the velocity dispersions. For example, we confirm the previously reported negative and positive galactocentric radial velocity gradients in the inner and outer disc, respectively. Here, we see them as part of a non-axisymmetric kinematic oscillation, and we map its azimuthal and vertical behaviour. We also witness a new global arrangement of stars in the velocity plane of the solar neighbourhood and in distant regions in which stars are organised in thin substructures with the shape of circular arches that are oriented approximately along the horizontal direction in the U - V plane. Moreover, in distant regions, we see variations in the velocity substructures more clearly than ever before, in particular, variations in the velocity of the Hercules stream. Conclusions. Gaia DR2 provides the largest existing full 6D phase-space coordinates catalogue. It also vastly increases the number of available distances and transverse velocities with respect to Gaia DR1. Gaia DR2 offers a great wealth of information on the Milky Way and reveals clear non-axisymmetric kinematic signatures within the Galactic disc, for instance. It is now up to the astronomical community to explore its full potential.


arXiv: Astrophysics | 2007

Gaia: organisation and challenges for the data processing

Francois Mignard; Coryn A. L. Bailer-Jones; Ulrich Bastian; R. Drimmel; Laurent Eyer; D. Katz; F. van Leeuwen; X. Luri; William O'Mullane; Xavier Passot; Dimitri Pourbaix; Timo Prusti

Gaia is an ambitious space astrometry mission of ESA with a main objective to map the sky in astrometry and photometry down to a magnitude 20 by the end of the next decade. While the mission is built and operated by ESA and an industrial consortium, the data processing is entrusted to a consortium formed by the scientific community, which was formed in 2006 and formally selected by ESA one year later. The satellite will downlink around 100 TB of raw telemetry data over a mission duration of 5 years from which a very complex iterative processing will lead to the final science output: astrometry with a final accuracy of a few tens of microarcseconds, epoch photometry in wide and narrow bands, radial velocity and spectra for the stars brighter than 17 mag. We discuss the general principles and main difficulties of this very large data processing and present the organization of the European Consortium responsible for its design and implementation.

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C. Reylé

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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A. C. Robin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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D. W. Evans

University of Cambridge

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F. Figueras

University of Barcelona

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T. Antoja

Kapteyn Astronomical Institute

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