Search

Your search keyword '"Bonanos, A. Z."' showing total 109 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Author "Bonanos, A. Z." Remove constraint Author: "Bonanos, A. Z." Language english Remove constraint Language: english
109 results on '"Bonanos, A. Z."'

Search Results

1. Episodic mass loss in the very luminous red supergiant [W60] B90 in the Large Magellanic Cloud.

2. NELIOTA: New results and updated statistics after 6.5 years of lunar impact flashes monitoring.

3. Using machine learning to investigate the populations of dusty evolved stars in various metallicities.

4. Using machine-learning to investigate the populations of dusty evolved stars in various metallicities

5. New B[e] supergiants and candidate Luminous Blue Variables in nearby galaxies from the ASSESS project

6. Early Spectroscopy and Dense Circumstellar Medium Interaction in SN~2023ixf

7. Evolved Massive Stars at Low-metallicity V. Mass-Loss Rate of Red Supergiant Stars in the Small Magellanic Cloud

8. Lunar impact flash results and space surveillance activities at Kryoneri Observatory

9. Luminous red supergiants in the Magellanic Clouds.

10. ASSESSing evolved massive stars in NGC 6822 and IC 10.

11. Using machine learning to investigate the populations of dusty evolved stars in various metallicities

12. Discovering New B[e] Supergiants and Candidate Luminous Blue Variables in Nearby Galaxies.

13. Introducing the ASSESS project: Episodic Mass Loss in Evolved Massive Stars - Key to Understanding the Explosive Early Universe.

15. The massive star population of the Virgo Cluster galaxy NGC 4535

16. OGLE-LMC-ECL-09937: The Most Massive Algol-Type Binary System With A Mass Measurement Accurate to 2%

17. Luminous red supergiants in the Magellanic Clouds.

18. ASSESSing evolved massive stars in NGC 6822 and IC 10.

19. First systematic high-precision survey of bright supernovae: I. Methodology for identifying early bumps.

21. Hubble Catalog of Variables.

22. Physical parameters of red supergiants in dwarf irregular galaxies in the Local Group.

23. The HST Key Project galaxies NGC 1326A, NGC 1425, and NGC 4548: New variable stars and massive star population.

24. Evolved massive stars at low-metallicity: I. A source catalog for the Small Magellanic Cloud.

25. Robust identification of active galactic nuclei through HST optical variability in GOODS-S: comparison with the X-ray and mid-IR-selected samples ★.

27. The Magellanic Quasars Survey. III. Spectroscopic Confirmation of 758 AGNs Behind the Magellanic Clouds

28. NELIOTA: The wide-field, high-cadence, lunar monitoring system at the prime focus of the Kryoneri telescope.

29. NELIOTA: First temperature measurement of lunar impact flashes.

30. Variability of Young Massive Stars in the Arches Cluster: Accurate Photometry with Adaptive Optics

31. The Hubble Catalog of Variables (HCV).

32. Monitoring luminous yellow massive stars in M33: new yellow hypergiant candidates.

33. The Most Massive Stars in the Local Group: Measuring Accurate Masses of Stars in Eclipsing Binaries

34. Re-analysis of VLT Data for M83 with Image Subtraction -- Nine-fold Increase in Number of Cepheids

35. Comparative performance of selected variability detection techniques in photometric time series data.

36. The Hubble Catalog of Variables.

38. Is the massive star cluster Westerlund 2 double? - A high resolution multi-band survey with the Hubble Space Telescope.

39. The infrared massive stellar content of M83.

40. Photometric Variability of OB-type stars as a New Window on Massive Stars.

41. Variability of massive stars with known spectral types in the Small Magellanic Cloud using 8 years of OGLE-III data.

42. Identification of red supergiants in nearby galaxies with mid-IR photometry.

43. THE MAGELLANIC QUASARS SURVEY. III. SPECTROSCOPIC CONFIRMATION OF 758 ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEI BEHIND THE MAGELLANIC CLOUDS.

44. Fundamental parameters of four massive eclipsing binaries in Westerlund 1.

45. Eclipsing binary distances to the edge of the Local Group.

46. THE PHOTOMETRIC AND SPECTRAL EVOLUTION OF THE 2008 LUMINOUS OPTICAL TRANSIENT IN NGC 300.

47. Techniques for Observing Binaries in Other Galaxies.

49. THE 2008 LUMINOUS OPTICAL TRANSIENT IN THE NEARBY GALAXY NGC 300Based in part on observations with the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope obtained at the Space Telescope Science Institute, and from the data archive at STScI, which is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc., under NASA contract NAS5-26555; in part on archival data obtained with the Spitzer Space Telescope, which is operated by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, under a contract with NASA; in part on observations obtained with the 6.5 m Magellan Clay Telescope located at Las Campanas Observatory, Chile; in part on data obtained with the ESO Very Large Telescope under program 281. D5017; and in part on observations obtained with the SMARTS Consortium 1.3 and 1.5 m telescopes located at Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory, Chile.

50. Photometric variability of WC9 stars.

Catalog

Books, media, physical & digital resources