85 results on '"Vanden Berk, Daniel"'
Search Results
2. SDSS Preburst Observations of Recent Gamma‐Ray Burst Fields
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Cool, Richard J., Eisenstein, Daniel J., Hogg, David W., Blanton, Michael R., Schlegel, David J., Brinkmann, J., Schneider, Donald P., and Vanden Berk, Daniel E.
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- 2006
- Full Text
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3. Extreme ultraviolet quasar colours from GALEX observations of the SDSS DR14Q catalogue.
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Vanden Berk, Daniel E, Wesolowski, Sarah C, Yeckley, Mary J, Marcinik, Joseph M, Quashnock, Jean M, Machia, Lawrence M, and Wu, Jian
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QUASARS , *COLOR , *DETECTION limit , *CATALOGS , *SKEWNESS (Probability theory) - Abstract
The rest-frame far to extreme ultraviolet (UV) colour–redshift relationship has been constructed from data on over |$480\, 000$| quasars carefully cross-matched between SDSS Data Release 14 and the final GALEX photometric catalogue. UV matching and detection probabilities are given for all the quasars, including dependencies on separation, optical brightness, and redshift. Detection limits are also provided for all objects. The UV colour distributions are skewed redward at virtually all redshifts, especially when detection limits are accounted for. The median GALEX far-UV minus near-UV (FUV − NUV) colour–redshift relation is reliably determined up to z ≈ 2.8, corresponding to rest-frame wavelengths as short as 400 Å. Extreme UV (EUV) colours are substantially redder than found previously, when detection limits are properly accounted for. Quasar template spectra were forward modelled through the GALEX bandpasses, accounting for intergalactic opacity, intrinsic reddening, and continuum slope variations. Intergalactic absorption by itself cannot account for the very red EUV colours. The colour–redshift relation is consistent with no intrinsic reddening, at least for SMC-like extinction. The best model fit has a FUV continuum power-law slope αν, FUV = −0.34 ± 0.03 consistent with previous results, but an EUV slope αν, EUV = −2.90 ± 0.04 that is much redder and inconsistent with any previous composite value (all ≳ −2.0). The EUV slope difference can be attributed in part to the tendency of previous studies to preferentially select UV brighter and bluer objects. The weak EUV flux suggests quasar accretion disc models that include outflows such as disc winds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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4. Galaxies with background QSOs - I. A search for strong galactic Hα lines.
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York, Donald G., Straka, Lorrie A., Bishof, Michael, Kuttruff, Seth, Bowen, David, Kulkarni, Varsha P., Subbarao, Mark, Richards, Gordon, Vanden Berk, Daniel, Hall, Patrick B., Heckman, Timothy, Khare, Pushpa, Quashnock, Jean, Ghering, Lara, and Johnson, Sean
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SPECTRA of quasars ,GALACTIC redshift ,FIELD emission ,INTERSTELLAR reddening ,ABSORPTION ,ASTRONOMICAL photometry ,ASTRONOMICAL observations ,INTERSTELLAR medium - Abstract
ABSTRACT A search for emission lines in foreground galaxies in quasar spectra ( z
gal < zQSO ) of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey data release 5 reveals 23 examples of quasars shining through low redshift, foreground galaxies at small impact parameters (<10 kpc). About 74 000 quasar spectra were examined by searching for narrow Hα emission lines at z < 0.38, at a flux level greater than 5 × 10−17 erg cm−2 s−1 , and then confirming that other expected emission lines of the H ii regions in the galaxy are detected. The galaxies were deblended from the quasar images to get colours and morphologies. For cases that allow the galaxy and the quasar to be deblended, the galaxies are blue (0.95 < ( u− r) < 1.95). Extinction and reddening through the galaxies are determined from the ( g− i) colour excess of the quasars. These reddening values are compared with the flux ratio of Hα to Hβ, which reflect the extinction for an undetermined fraction of the sightline through each galaxy. No trends were found relating E( B− V)( g− i) , impact parameter ( b), and ( u− r) for the galaxies or between E( B− V) derived from ( g− i) and that derived from Hα/Hβ. Comparison with previous studies of quasar absorption systems indicates that our sample is more reddened, suggesting disc-dominated absorber galaxies. Measurement or limits on galactic, interstellar Ca ii and Na i absorption lines are given from the quasar spectrum. No trends were found relating the Ca ii equivalent width W (Ca ii) or the Na i equivalent width W (Na i) to b, but a correlation of rs =−0.77 (α= 0.05) was found relating W (Ca ii) and E( B− V)( g− i) . [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2012
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5. Exploring the dust content of Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 7 damped Lyman α systems at.
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Khare, Pushpa, Vanden Berk, Daniel, York, Donald G., Lundgren, Britt, and Kulkarni, Varsha P.
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COSMIC dust , *DATA , *SPECTRUM analysis , *COMPOSITE materials , *METAPHYSICAL cosmology , *QUASARS - Abstract
ABSTRACT We have studied a sample of 1084 intervening absorption systems with 2.15 ≤ zab≤ 5.2, having in the spectra of quasi-stellar objects (QSOs) in Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Data Release 7 (DR7), with the aim of understanding the nature and abundance of the dust and the chemical abundances in the damped Lyman α (DLA) absorbers. Composite spectra were constructed for the full sample and several subsamples, chosen on the basis of absorber and QSO properties. Average extinction curves were obtained for the samples by comparing their geometric mean composite spectra with those of two samples of QSOs, matching in zem and i magnitude with the DLA sample, one sample without any absorbers along their lines of sight and the other without any DLAs along their lines of sight irrespective of the presence of other absorption systems. We also derived relative extinction curves of several pairs of subsamples. While the average reddening in the DLA sample is small, we find definite evidence for the presence of dust in subsamples based on absorber properties, in particular the strength of metal absorption lines. DLAs along lines of sight to QSOs which are not colour selected are found to be more dusty compared to those along the lines of sight to the more numerous colour-selected QSOs. From these studies and from the strengths of absorption lines in the composite spectra, we conclude that ≤10 per cent of the DLAs in SDSS DR7 cause significant reddening, have stronger absorption lines and have higher abundances as compared to the rest of the sample. The rest of the sample shows little reddening. While, due to the dominant colour selection method used to target QSOs in the SDSS DR7, this fraction of 10 per cent likely represents a lower limit for the global fraction of dusty DLAs at high z, it is also possible that the dust grain sizes at high redshifts are larger, giving rise to a flat extinction curve over the observed range of wavelengths. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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6. Narrow associated quasi-stellar object absorbers: clustering, outflows and the line-of-sight proximity effect.
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Wild, Vivienne, Kauffmann, Guinevere, White, Simon, York, Donald, Lehnert, Matthew, Heckman, Timothy, Hall, Patrick B., Khare, Pushpa, Lundgren, Britt, Schneider, Donald P., and Vanden Berk, Daniel
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QUASARS ,RADIO sources (Astronomy) ,STATISTICAL correlation ,REDSHIFT ,GALAXIES - Abstract
Using data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey data release 3 (SDSS DR3), we investigate how narrow (<700 km s
−1 ) C iv and Mg ii quasar absorption-line systems are distributed around quasars. The C iv absorbers lie in the redshift range 1.6 < z < 4 and the Mg ii absorbers in the range 0.4 < z < 2.2. By correlating absorbers with quasars on different but neighbouring lines of sight, we measure the clustering of absorbers around quasars on comoving scales between 4 and 30 Mpc. The observed comoving correlation lengths are , similar to those observed for bright galaxies at these redshifts. Comparing correlations between absorbers and the quasars, in whose spectra they are identified, then implies: (i) that quasars destroy absorbers to comoving distances of ∼300 kpc (C iv) and ∼800 kpc (Mg ii) along their lines of sight; (ii) that ≳40 per cent of C iv absorbers within 3000 km s−1 of the quasi-stellar object are not a result of large-scale clustering but rather are directly associated with the quasar itself; (iii) that this intrinsic absorber population extends to outflow velocities of the order of 12 000 km s−1 ; (iv) that this outflow component is present in both radio-loud and radio-quiet quasars and (v) that a small high-velocity outflow component is also observed in the Mg ii population. We also find an indication that absorption systems within 3000 km s−1 are more abundant for radio-loud quasars than for radio-quiet quasars. This suggests either that radio-loud objects live in more massive haloes, or that their radio activity generates an additional low-velocity outflow, or both. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2008
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7. On the variability of quasars: a link between the Eddington ratio and optical variability?
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Wilhite, Brian C., Brunner, Robert J., Grier, Catherine J., Schneider, Donald P., and Vanden Berk, Daniel E.
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QUASARS ,REDSHIFT ,ASTROPHYSICS ,METAPHYSICAL cosmology ,SUPERMASSIVE black holes - Abstract
Repeat scans by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) of a 278-deg
2 stripe along the celestial equator have yielded an average of over 10 observations each for nearly 8000 spectroscopically confirmed quasars. Over 2500 of these quasars are in the redshift range such that the C ivλ 1549 emission line is visible in the SDSS spectrum. Utilizing the width of these C iv lines and the luminosity of the nearby continuum, we estimate black hole masses for these objects. In an effort to isolate the effects of black hole mass and luminosity on the photometric variability of our data set, we create several subsamples by binning in these two physical parameters. By comparing the ensemble structure functions of the quasars in these bins, we are able to reproduce the well-known anticorrelation between luminosity and variability, now showing that this anticorrelation is independent of the black hole mass. In addition, we find a correlation between variability and the mass of the central black hole. By combining these two relations, we identify the Eddington ratio as a possible driver of quasar variability, most likely due to differences in accretion efficiency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2008
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8. Average extinction curves and relative abundances for quasi-stellar object absorption-line systems at 1 ≤ zabs < 2.
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York, Donald G., Khare, Pushpa, Vanden Berk, Daniel, Kulkarni, Varsha P., Crotts, Arlin P. S., Lauroesch, James T., Richards, Gordon T., Schneider, Donald P., Welty, Daniel E., Alsayyad, Yusra, Kumar, Abhishek, Lundgren, Britt, Shanidze, Natela, Smith, Tristan, Vanlandingham, Johnny, Baugher, Britt, Hall, Patrick B., Jenkins, Edward B., Menard, Brice, and Rao, Sandhya
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QUASARS ,RADIO sources (Astronomy) ,MAGELLANIC clouds ,CHEMICAL elements ,ABSORPTION - Abstract
We have studied a sample of 809 Mg ii absorption systems with in the spectra of Sloan Digital Sky Survey quasi-stellar objects (QSOs), with the aim of understanding the nature and abundance of the dust and the chemical abundances in the intervening absorbers. Normalized, composite spectra were derived, for abundance measurements, for the full sample and several subsamples, chosen on the basis of the line strengths and other absorber and QSO properties. Average extinction curves were obtained for the subsamples by comparing their geometric mean spectra with those of matching samples of QSOs without absorbers in their spectra. There is clear evidence for the presence of dust in the intervening absorbers. The 2175-Å feature is not present in the extinction curves, for any of the subsamples. The extinction curves are similar to the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) extinction curve with a rising ultraviolet (UV) extinction below 2200 Å. The absorber rest-frame colour excess, , derived from the extinction curves, depends on the absorber properties and ranges from <0.001 to 0.085 for various subsamples. The column densities of Mg ii, Al ii, Si ii, Ca ii, Ti ii, Cr ii, Mn ii, Fe ii, Co ii, Ni ii and Zn ii do not show such a correspondingly large variation. The overall depletions in the high samples are consistent with those found for individual damped Lyman α systems, the depletion pattern being similar to halo clouds in the Galaxy. Assuming an SMC gas-to-dust ratio, we find a trend of increasing abundance with decreasing extinction; systems with show solar abundance of Zn. The large velocity spread of strong Mg ii systems seems to be mimicked by weak lines of other elements. The ionization of the absorbers, in general appears to be low: the ratio of the column densities of Al iii to Al ii is always less than 1/2. QSOs with absorbers are, in general, at least three times as likely to have highly reddened spectra as compared to QSOs without any absorption systems in their spectra. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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9. The Sloan Digital Sky Survey QSO absorption line catalogue.
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York, Donald G., Vanden Berk, Daniel, Richards, Gordon T., Crotts, Arlin P. S., Khare, Pushpa, Lauroesch, James, Lemoine, Martin, Burles, Scott, Bernardi, Mariangela, Castander, Francisco J., Frieman, Josh, Loveday, Jon, Meiksin, Avery, Nichol, Robert, Schlegel, David, Schneider, Donald P., Subbarao, Mark, Stoughton, Chris, Szalay, Alex, and Yanny, Brian
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The spectra of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) are being used to construct a catalogue of QSO absorption lines, for use in studies of abundances, relevant radiation fields, number counts as a function of redshift, and other matters, including the evolution of these parameters. The catalogue includes intervening, associated, and BAL absorbers, in order to allow a clearer definition of the relationships between these three classes. We describe the motivation for and the data products of the project to build the SDSS QSO absorption line catalogue. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2005
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10. The Sixth Data Release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
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Adelman‐McCarthy, Jennifer K., Agüeros, Marcel A., Allam, Sahar S., Allende Prieto, Carlos, Anderson, Kurt S.J., Anderson, Scott F., Annis, James, Bahcall, Neta A., Bailer‐Jones, C. A. L., Baldry, Ivan K., Barentine, J. C., Bassett, Bruce A., Becker, Andrew C., Beers, Timothy C., Bell, Eric F., Berlind, Andreas A., Bernardi, Mariangela, Blanton, Michael R., Bochanski, John J., Boroski, William N., Brinchmann, Jarle, Brinkmann, J., Brunner, Robert J., Budavári, Tamás, Carliles, Samuel, Carr, Michael A., Castander, Francisco J., Cinabro, David, Cool, R. J., Covey, Kevin R., Csabai, István, Cunha, Carlos E., Davenport, James R. A., Dilday, Ben, Doi, Mamoru, Eisenstein, Daniel James, Evans, Michael L., Fan, Xiaohui, Finkbeiner, Douglas, Friedman, Scott D., Frieman, Joshua A., Fukugita, Masataka, Gänsicke, Boris T., Gates, Evalyn, Gillespie, Bruce, Glazebrook, Karl, Gray, Jim, Grebel, Eva K., Gunn, James E., Gurbani, Vijay K., Hall, Patrick B., Harding, Paul, Harvanek, Michael, Hawley, Suzanne L., Hayes, Jeffrey, Heckman, Timothy M., Hendry, John S., Hindsley, Robert B., Hirata, Christopher M., Hogan, Craig J., Hogg, David W., Hyde, Joseph B., Ichikawa, Shin‐ichi, Ivezi?, ?eljko, Jester, Sebastian, Johnson, Jennifer A., Jorgensen, Anders M., Juric, Mario, Kent, Stephen M., Kessler, R., Kleinman, S. J., Knapp, G. R., Kron, Richard G., Krzesinski, Jurek, Kuropatkin, Nikolay, Lamb, Donald Q., Lampeitl, Hubert, Lebedeva, Svetlana, Lee, Young Sun, Leger, R. French, Lépine, Sébastien, Lima, Marcos, Lin, Huan, Long, Daniel C., Loomis, Craig P., Loveday, Jon, Lupton, Robert H., Malanushenko, Olena, Malanushenko, Viktor, Mandelbaum, Rachel, Margon, Bruce, Marriner, John P., Martínez‐Delgado, David, Matsubara, Takahiko, McGehee, Peregrine M., McKay, Timothy A., Meiksin, Avery, Morrison, Heather L., Munn, Jeffrey A., Nakajima, Reiko, Neilsen, Eric H. Jr., Newberg, Heidi Jo, Nichol, Robert C., Nicinski, Tom, Nieto‐Santisteban, Maria, Nitta, Atsuko, Okamura, Sadanori, Owen, Russell, Oyaizu, Hiroaki, Padmanabhan, Nikhil, Pan, Kaike, Park, Changbom, Peoples, Jr., John, Pier, Jeffrey R., Pope, Adrian C., Purger, Norbert, Raddick, M. Jordan, Re Fiorentin, Paola, Richards, Gordon T., Richmond, Michael W., Riess, Adam G., Rix, Hans‐Walter, Rockosi, Constance M., Sako, Masao, Schlegel, David J., Schneider, Donald P., Schreiber, Matthias R., Schwope, Axel D., Seljak, Uros, Sesar, Branimir, Sheldon, Erin, Shimasaku, Kazu, Sivarani, Thirupathi, Smith, J. Allyn, Snedden, Stephanie A., Steinmetz, Matthias, Strauss, Michael A., SubbaRao, Mark, Suto, Yasushi, Szalay, Alexander S., Szapudi, István, Szkody, Paula, Tegmark, Max, Thakar, Aniruddha R., Tremonti, Christy A., Tucker, Douglas L., Uomoto, Alan, Vanden Berk, Daniel E., Vandenberg, Jan, Vidrih, S., Vogeley, Michael S., Voges, Wolfgang, Vogt, Nicole P., Wadadekar, Yogesh, Weinberg, David H., West, Andrew A., White, Simon D. M., Wilhite, Brian C., Yanny, Brian, Yocum, D. R., York, Donald G., Zehavi, Idit, and Zucker, Daniel B.
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atlases ,catalogs ,surveys - Abstract
This paper describes the Sixth Data Release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. With this data release, the imaging of the northern Galactic cap is now complete. The survey contains images and parameters of roughly 287 million objects over 9583 deg2, including scans over a large range of Galactic latitudes and longitudes. The survey also includes 1.27 million spectra of stars, galaxies, quasars, and blank sky (for sky subtraction) selected over 7425 deg2. This release includes much more stellar spectroscopy than was available in previous data releases and also includes detailed estimates of stellar temperatures, gravities, and metallicities. The results of improved photometric calibration are now available, with uncertainties of roughly 1% in g, r, i, and z, and 2% in u, substantially better than the uncertainties in previous data releases. The spectra in this data release have improved wavelength and flux calibration, especially in the extreme blue and extreme red, leading to the qualitatively better determination of stellar types and radial velocities. The spectrophotometric fluxes are now tied to point-spread function magnitudes of stars rather than fiber magnitudes. This gives more robust results in the presence of seeing variations, but also implies a change in the spectrophotometric scale, which is now brighter by roughly 0.35 mag. Systematic errors in the velocity dispersions of galaxies have been fixed, and the results of two independent codes for determining spectral classifications and redshifts are made available. Additional spectral outputs are made available, including calibrated spectra from individual 15 minute exposures and the sky spectrum subtracted from each exposure. We also quantify a recently recognized underestimation of the brightnesses of galaxies of large angular extent due to poor sky subtraction; the bias can exceed 0.2 mag for galaxies brighter than r = 14 mag., Astronomy
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- 2008
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11. Exploring the Variable Sky with the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
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Sesar, Branimir, Ivezic, Zeljko, Lupton, Robert H., Juric, Mario, Gunn, James E., Knapp, Gillian R., De Lee, Nathan, Smith, J. Allyn, Miknaitis, Gajus, Lin, Huan, Tucker, Douglas, Doi, Mamoru, Tanaka, Masayuki, Fukugita, Masataka, Holtzman, Jon, Kent, Steve, Yanny, Brian, Schlegel, David, Finkbeiner, Douglas, Padmanabhan, Nikhil, Rockosi, Constance M., Bond, Nicholas, Lee, Brian, Stoughton, Chris, Jester, Sebastian, Harris, Hugh, Harding, Paul, Brinkmann, Jon, Schneider, Donald P., York, Donald, Richmond, Michael W., and Vanden Berk, Daniel
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Galaxy: halo ,Galaxy: stellar content ,quasars: general ,stars: Population II ,stars: variables: other - Abstract
We quantify the variability of faint unresolved optical sources using a catalog based on multiple SDSS imaging observations. The catalog covers SDSS stripe 82, which lies along the celestial equator in the southern Galactic hemisphere (22h24m < αJ2000.0 < 04h08m, -1.27° < δJ2000.0 < +1.27°, ~290 deg2), and contains 34 million photometric observations in the SDSS ugriz system for 748,084 unresolved sources at high Galactic latitudes (b < -20°) that were observed at least four times in each of the ugri bands (with a median of 10 observations obtained over ~6 yr). In each photometric bandpass we compute various low-order light-curve statistics, such as rms scatter, χ2 per degree of freedom, skewness, and minimum and maximum magnitude, and use them to select and study variable sources. We find that 2% of unresolved optical sources brighter than g = 20.5 appear variable at the 0.05 mag level (rms) simultaneously in the g and r bands (at high Galactic latitudes). The majority (2 out of 3) of these variable sources are low-redshift (<2) quasars, although they represent only 2% of all sources in the adopted flux-limited sample. We find that at least 90% of quasars are variable at the 0.03 mag level (rms) and confirm that variability is as good a method for finding low-redshift quasars as the UV excess color selection (at high Galactic latitudes). We analyze the distribution of light-curve skewness for quasars and find that it is centered on zero. We find that about one-fourth of the variable stars are RR Lyrae stars, and that only 0.5% of stars from the main stellar locus are variable at the 0.05 mag level. The distribution of light-curve skewness in the g - r versus u - g color-color diagram on the main stellar locus is found to be bimodal (with one mode consistent with Algol-like behavior). Using over 600 RR Lyrae stars, we demonstrate rich halo substructure out to distances of 100 kpc. We extrapolate these results to the expected performance by the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope and estimate that it will obtain well-sampled, 2% accurate, multicolor light curves for ~2 million low-redshift quasars and discover at least 50 million variable stars., Astronomy
- Published
- 2007
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12. Variable Faint Optical Sources Discovered by Comparing the POSS and SDSS Catalogs
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Sesar, Branimir, Svilkovic, Domjan, Ivezic, Zeljko, Lupton, Robert H., Munn, Jeffrey A., Finkbeiner, Douglas, Steinhardt, William, Siverd, Rob, Johnston, David E., Knapp, Gillian R., Gunn, James E., Rockosi, Constance M., Schlegel, David, Vanden Berk, Daniel E., Hall, Pat, Schneider, Donald P., and Brunner, Robert J.
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Galaxy: halo ,Galaxy: stellar content ,quasars: general ,stars: variables: other - Abstract
We present a study of variable faint optical sources discovered by comparing the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and the Palomar Observatory Sky Survey (POSS) catalogs. We use SDSS measurements to photometrically recalibrate several publicly available POSS catalogs (USNO-A2.0, USNO-B1.0, DPOSS [the Digitized Second Palomar Observatory Sky Survey], and GSC2.2 [the Guide Star Catalog 2.2]). A piecewise recalibration of the POSS data in 100 arcmin2 patches (one SDSS field) generally results in an improvement of photometric accuracy (rms) by nearly a factor of 2, compared to the original data. In addition to the smaller core width of the error distribution, the tails of the distribution become much steeper after the recalibration. These improvements are mostly due to the very dense grid of calibration stars provided by SDSS, which rectifies the intrinsic inhomogeneities of Schmidt plates. We find that the POSS I magnitudes can be improved to ~0.15 mag accuracy, and POSS II magnitudes to ~0.10 mag accuracy. The smallest final errors are obtained with the GSC2.2 catalog, for which they approach 0.07 mag at the bright end. We use the recalibrated catalogs for the ~3300 deg2 of sky in the SDSS Data Release 2 to construct a catalog of ~60,000 sources that are variable on timescales of 10-50 yr, and make it publicly available. Using this catalog, we find that at least 1% of faint optical sources appear variable at the >0.25 mag level, and that about 20% of the variable population are quasars, although they represent only 0.6% of all point sources in the adopted flux-limited sample (g < 19). A series of statistical tests based on the morphology of SDSS color-magnitude and color-color diagrams, as well as visual comparison of images and comparison with repeated SDSS observations, demonstrate the robustness of the selection methods: three out of four candidate variable sources are correctly recognized to vary. We also demonstrate that candidate RR Lyrae stars trace the same halo structures, such as the Sgr dwarf tidal stream, that were discovered using repeated SDSS observations. We utilize the POSS-SDSS selected candidates to constrain the halo structure in the parts of sky for which repeated SDSS observations do not exist. We quantify the distribution of variable sources in the SDSS color-color diagrams and the variability characteristics of quasars. The observed long-term quasar variability (structure function) is smaller than predicted by the extrapolation of the power law measured for short timescales using repeated SDSS imaging (0.35 vs. 0.60 mag for SDSS-POSS I and 0.24 vs. 0.35 mag for SDSS-POSS II, rms). This turnover in structure function suggests that the characteristic timescale for quasar variability is on the order of 1 yr in the rest frame., Astronomy
- Published
- 2006
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13. The Third Data Release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
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Abazajian, Kevork, Adelman-McCarthy, Jennifer K., Agüeros, Marcel A., Allam, Sahar S., Anderson, Kurt S. J., Anderson, Scott F., Annis, James, Bahcall, Neta A., Baldry, Ivan K., Bastian, Steven, Berlind, Andreas, Bernardi, Mariangela, Blanton, Michael R., Bochanski, John J. Jr., Boroski, William N., Brewington, Howard J., Briggs, John W., Brinkmann, J., Brunner, Robert J., Budavári, Tamás, Carey, Larry N., Castander, Francisco J., Connolly, A. J., Covey, Kevin R., Csabai, István, Dalcanton, Julianne J., Doi, Mamoru, Dong, Feng, Eisenstein, Daniel James, Evans, Michael L., Fan, Xiaohui, Finkbeiner, Douglas, Friedman, Scott D., Frieman, Joshua A., Fukugita, Masataka, Gillespie, Bruce, Glazebrook, Karl, Gray, Jim, Grebel, Eva K., Gunn, James E., Gurbani, Vijay K., Hall, Patrick B., Hamabe, Masaru, Harbeck, Daniel, Harris, Frederick H., Harris, Hugh C., Harvanek, Michael, Hawley, Suzanne L., Hayes, Jeffrey, Heckman, Timothy M., Hendry, John S., Hennessy, Gregory S., Hindsley, Robert B., Hogan, Craig J., Hogg, David W., Holmgren, Donald J., Holtzman, Jon A., Ichikawa, Shin-ichi, Ichikawa, Takashi, Ivezic, Zeljko, Jester, Sebastian, Johnston, David E., Jorgensen, Anders M., Juri?, Mario, Kent, Stephen M., Kleinman, S. J., Knapp, G. R., Kniazev, Alexei Yu., Kron, Richard G., Krzesinski, Jurek, Lamb, Donald Q., Lampeitl, Hubert, Lee, Brian C., Lin, Huan, Long, Daniel C., Loveday, Jon, Lupton, Robert H., Mannery, Ed, Margon, Bruce, Martínez-Delgado, David, Matsubara, Takahiko, McGehee, Peregrine M., McKay, Timothy A., Meiksin, Avery, Ménard, Brice, Munn, Jeffrey A., Nash, Thomas, Neilsen, Eric H. Jr., Newberg, Heidi Jo, Newman, Peter R., Nichol, Robert C., Nicinski, Tom, Nieto-Santisteban, Maria, Nitta, Atsuko, Okamura, Sadanori, O, William, Owen, Russell, Padmanabhan, Nikhil, Pauls, George, Peoples, John, Pier, Jeffrey R., Pope, Adrian C., Pourbaix, Dimitri, Quinn, Thomas R., Raddick, M. Jordan, Richards, Gordon T., Richmond, Michael W., Rix, Hans-Walter, Rockosi, Constance M., Schlegel, David J., Schneider, Donald P., Schroeder, Joshua, Scranton, Ryan, Sekiguchi, Maki, Sheldon, Erin, Shimasaku, Kazu, Silvestri, Nicole M., Smith, J. Allyn, Smol?i?, Vernesa, Snedden, Stephanie A., Stebbins, Albert, Stoughton, Chris, Strauss, Michael A., SubbaRao, Mark, Szalay, Alexander S., Szapudi, István, Szkody, Paula, Szokoly, Gyula P., Tegmark, Max, Teodoro, Luis, Thakar, Aniruddha R., Tremonti, Christy, Tucker, Douglas L., Uomoto, Alan, Vanden Berk, Daniel E., Vandenberg, Jan, Vogeley, Michael S., Voges, Wolfgang, Vogt, Nicole P., Walkowicz, Lucianne M., Wang, Shu-i, Weinberg, David H., West, Andrew A., White, Simon D. M., Wilhite, Brian C., Xu, Yongzhong, Yanny, Brian, Yasuda, Naoki, Yip, Ching-Wa, Yocum, D. R., York, Donald G., Zehavi, Idit, Zibetti, Stefano, and Zucker, Daniel B.
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atlases ,catalogs ,surveys - Abstract
This paper describes the Third Data Release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). This release, containing data taken up through 2003 June, includes imaging data in five bands over 5282 deg2, photometric and astrometric catalogs of the 141 million objects detected in these imaging data, and spectra of 528,640 objects selected over 4188 deg2. The pipelines analyzing both images and spectroscopy are unchanged from those used in our Second Data Release., Astronomy
- Published
- 2005
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14. Cosmological parameters from SDSS and WMAP
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Tegmark, Max, Strauss, Michael A., Blanton, Michael R., Abazajian, Kevork, Dodelson, Scott, Sandvik, Havard, Wang, Xiaomin, Weinberg, David H., Zehavi, Idit, Bahcall, Neta A., Hoyle, Fiona, Schlegel, David, Scoccimarro, Roman, Vogeley, Michael S., Berlind, Andreas, Budavari, Tamás, Connolly, Andrew, Eisenstein, Daniel James, Finkbeiner, Douglas, Frieman, Joshua A., Gunn, James E., Hui, Lam, Jain, Bhuvnesh, Johnston, David, Kent, Stephen, Lin, Huan, Nakajima, Reiko, Nichol, Robert C., Ostriker, Jeremiah P., Pope, Adrian, Scranton, Ryan, Seljak, Uroš, Sheth, Ravi K., Stebbins, Albert, Szalay, Alexander S., Szapudi, István, Xu, Yongzhong, Annis, James, Brinkmann, J., Burles, Scott, Castander, Francisco J., Csabai, Istvan, Loveday, Jon, Doi, Mamoru, Fukugita, Masataka, Gillespie, Bruce, Hennessy, Greg, Hogg, David W., Ivezic, Zeljko, Knapp, Gillian R., Lamb, Don Q., Lee, Brian C., Lupton, Robert H., McKay, Timothy A., Kunszt, Peter, Munn, Jeffrey A., O’Connell, Liam, Peoples, John, Pier, Jeffrey R., Richmond, Michael, Rockosi, Constance, Schneider, Donald P., Stoughton, Christopher, Tucker, Douglas L., Vanden Berk, Daniel E., Yanny, Brian, and York, Donald G.
- Abstract
We measure cosmological parameters using the three-dimensional power spectrum P(k) from over 200,000 galaxies in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) in combination with WMAP and other data. Our results are consistent with a ``vanilla'' flat adiabatic Lambda-CDM model without tilt (n=1), running tilt, tensor modes or massive neutrinos. Adding SDSS information more than halves the WMAP-only error bars on some parameters, tightening 1 sigma constraints on the Hubble parameter from h~0.74+0.18-0.07 to h~0.70+0.04-0.03, on the matter density from Omega_m~0.25+/-0.10 to Omega_m~0.30+/-0.04 (1 sigma) and on neutrino masses from <11 eV to <0.6 eV (95%). SDSS helps even more when dropping prior assumptions about curvature, neutrinos, tensor modes and the equation of state. Our results are in substantial agreement with the joint analysis of WMAP and the 2dF Galaxy Redshift Survey, which is an impressive consistency check with independent redshift survey data and analysis techniques. In this paper, we place particular emphasis on clarifying the physical origin of the constraints, i.e., what we do and do not know when using different data sets and prior assumptions. For instance, dropping the assumption that space is perfectly flat, the WMAP-only constraint on the measured age of the Universe tightens from t0~16.3+2.3-1.8 Gyr to t0~14.1+1.0-0.9 Gyr by adding SDSS and SN Ia data. Including tensors, running tilt, neutrino mass and equation of state in the list of free parameters, many constraints are still quite weak, but future cosmological measurements from SDSS and other sources should allow these to be substantially tightened., Astronomy
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- 2004
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15. The Second Data Release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
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Abazajian, Kevork, Adelman-McCarthy, Jennifer K., Agüeros, Marcel A., Allam, Sahar S., Anderson, Kurt, S. J., Anderson, Scott F., Annis, James, Bahcall, Neta A., Baldry, Ivan K., Bastian, Steven, Berlind, Andreas, Bernardi, Mariangela, Blanton, Michael R., Bochanski, John J. Jr., Boroski, William N., Briggs, John W., Brinkmann, J., Brunner, Robert J., Budavári, Tamás, Carey, Larry N., Carliles, Samuel, Castander, Francisco J., Connolly, A. J., Csabai, István, Doi, Mamoru, Dong, Feng, Eisenstein, Daniel James, Evans, Michael L., Fan, Xiaohui, Finkbeiner, Douglas, Friedman, Scott D., Frieman, Joshua A., Fukugita, Masataka, Gal, Roy R., Gillespie, Bruce, Glazebrook, Karl, Gray, Jim, Grebel, Eva K., Gunn, James E., Gurbani, Vijay K., Hall, Patrick B., Hamabe, Masaru, Harris, Frederick H., Harris, Hugh C., Harvanek, Michael, Heckman, Timothy M., Hendry, John S., Hennessy, Gregory S., Hindsley, Robert B., Hogan, Craig J., Hogg, David W., Holmgren, Donald J., Ichikawa, Shin-ichi, Ichikawa, Takashi, Ivezic, Zeljko, Jester, Sebastian, Johnston, David E., Jorgensen, Anders M., Kent, Stephen M., Kleinman, S. J., Knapp, G. R., Kniazev, Alexei Yu., Kron, Richard G., Krzesinski, Jurek, Kunszt, Peter Z., Kuropatkin, Nickolai, Lamb, Donald Q., Lampeitl, Hubert, Lee, Brian C., Leger, R. French, Li, Nolan, Lin, Huan, Loh, Yeong-Shang, Long, Daniel C., Loveday, Jon, Lupton, Robert H., Malik, Tanu, Margon, Bruce, Matsubara, Takahiko, McGehee, Peregrine M., McKay, Timothy A., Meiksin, Avery, Munn, Jeffrey A., Nakajima, Reiko, Nash, Thomas, Neilsen, Eric H. Jr., Newberg, Heidi Jo, Newman, Peter R., Nichol, Robert C., Nicinski, Tom, Nieto-Santisteban, Maria, Nitta, Atsuko, Okamura, Sadanori, O, William, Ostriker, Jeremiah P., Owen, Russell, Padmanabhan, Nikhil, Peoples, John, Pier, Jeffrey R., Pope, Adrian C., Quinn, Thomas R., Richards, Gordon T., Richmond, Michael W., Rix, Hans-Walter, Rockosi, Constance M., Schlegel, David J., Schneider, Donald P., Scranton, Ryan, Sekiguchi, Maki, Seljak, Uros, Sergey, Gary, Sesar, Branimir, Sheldon, Erin, Shimasaku, Kazu, Siegmund, Walter A., Silvestri, Nicole M., Smith, J. Allyn, Smolčić, Vernesa, Snedden, Stephanie A., Stebbins, Albert, Stoughton, Chris, Strauss, Michael A., SubbaRao, Mark, Szalay, Alexander S., Szapudi, István, Szkody, Paula, Szokoly, Gyula P., Tegmark, Max, Teodoro, Luis, Thakar, Aniruddha R., Tremonti, Christy, Tucker, Douglas L., Uomoto, Alan, Vanden Berk, Daniel E., Vandenberg, Jan, Vogeley, Michael S., Voges, Wolfgang, Vogt, Nicole P., Walkowicz, Lucianne M., Wang, Shu-i, Weinberg, David H., West, Andrew A., White, Simon D. M., Wilhite, Brian C., Xu, Yongzhong, Yanny, Brian, Yasuda, Naoki, Yip, Ching-Wa, Yocum, D. R., York, Donald G., Zehavi, Idit, Zibetti, Stefano, and Zucker, Daniel B.
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atlases ,catalogs ,surveys - Abstract
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) has validated and made publicly available its Second Data Release. This data release consists of 3324 deg2 of five-band (ugriz) imaging data with photometry for over 88 million unique objects, 367,360 spectra of galaxies, quasars, stars, and calibrating blank sky patches selected over 2627 deg2 of this area, and tables of measured parameters from these data. The imaging data reach a depth of r ≈ 22.2 (95% completeness limit for point sources) and are photometrically and astrometrically calibrated to 2% rms and 100 mas rms per coordinate, respectively. The imaging data have all been processed through a new version of the SDSS imaging pipeline, in which the most important improvement since the last data release is fixing an error in the model fits to each object. The result is that model magnitudes are now a good proxy for point-spread function magnitudes for point sources, and Petrosian magnitudes for extended sources. The spectroscopy extends from 3800 to 9200 Å at a resolution of 2000. The spectroscopic software now repairs a systematic error in the radial velocities of certain types of stars and has substantially improved spectrophotometry. All data included in the SDSS Early Data Release and First Data Release are reprocessed with the improved pipelines and included in the Second Data Release. Further characteristics of the data are described, as are the data products themselves and the tools for accessing them., Astronomy
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- 2004
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16. Sloan Digital Sky Survey Imaging of Low Galactic Latitude Fields: Technical Summary and Data Release
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Finkbeiner, Douglas, Padmanabhan, Nikhil, Schlegel, David J., Carr, Michael A., Gunn, James E., Rockosi, Constance M., Sekiguchi, Maki, Lupton, Robert H., Knapp, G. R., Ivezic, Zeljko, Blanton, Michael R., Hogg, David W., Adelman-McCarthy, Jennifer K., Annis, James, Hayes, Jeffrey, Kinney, Ellynne, Long, Daniel C., Seljak, Uros, Strauss, Michael A., Yanny, Brian, Agüeros, Marcel A., Allam, Sahar S., Anderson, Scott F., Bahcall, Neta A., Baldry, Ivan K., Bernardi, Mariangela, Boroski, William N., Briggs, John W., Brinkmann, J., Brunner, Robert J., Budavári, Tamás, Castander, Francisco J., Covey, Kevin R., Csabai, István, Doi, Mamoru, Dong, Feng, Eisenstein, Daniel James, Fan, Xiaohui, Friedman, Scott D., Fukugita, Masataka, Gillespie, Bruce, Grebel, Eva K., Gurbani, Vijay K., de Haas, Ernst, Harris, Frederick H., Hendry, John S., Hennessy, Gregory S., Jester, Sebastian, Johnston, David E., Jorgensen, Anders M., Juric, Mario, Kent, Stephen M., Kniazev, Alexei Yu., Krzesinski, Jurek, Leger, R. French, Lin, Huan, Loveday, Jon, Mannery, Ed, Martínez-Delgado, David, McGehee, Peregrine M., Meiksin, Avery, Munn, Jeffrey A., Neilsen, Eric H. Jr., Newman, Peter R., Nitta, Atsuko, Pauls, George, Quinn, Thomas R., Rafikov, R. R., Richards, Gordon T., Richmond, Michael W., Schneider, Donald P., Schroeder, Joshua, Shimasaku, Kazu, Siegmund, Walter A., Smith, J. Allyn, Snedden, Stephanie A., Stebbins, Albert, Szalay, Alexander S., Szokoly, Gyula P., Tegmark, Max, Tucker, Douglas L., Uomoto, Alan, Vanden Berk, Daniel E., Weinberg, David H., West, Andrew A., Yasuda, Naoki, Yocum, D. R., York, Donald G., and Zehavi, Idit
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atlases ,catalogs ,surveys - Abstract
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) mosaic camera and telescope have obtained five-band optical-wavelength imaging near the Galactic plane outside of the nominal survey boundaries. These additional data were obtained during commissioning and subsequent testing of the SDSS observing system, and they provide unique wide-area imaging data in regions of high obscuration and star formation, including numerous young stellar objects, Herbig-Haro objects, and young star clusters. Because these data are outside the survey regions in the Galactic caps, they are not part of the standard SDSS data releases. This paper presents imaging data for 832 square degrees of sky (including repeats), in the star-forming regions of Orion, Taurus, and Cygnus. About 470 deg2 are now released to the public, with the remainder to follow at the time of SDSS Data Release 4. The public data in Orion include the star-forming region NGC 2068/NGC 2071/HH 24 and a large part of Barnard's loop., Astronomy
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- 2004
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17. The First Data Release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
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Abazajian, Kevork, Adelman-McCarthy, Jennifer K., Ageros, Marcel A., Allam, Sahar S., Anderson, Scott F., Annis, James, Bahcall, Neta A., Baldry, Ivan K., Bastian, Steven, Berlind, Andreas, Bernardi, Mariangela, Blanton, Michael R., Blythe, Norman, Bochanski, John J. Jr., Boroski, William N., Brewington, Howard, Briggs, John W., Brinkmann, J., Brunner, Robert J., Budavri, Tams, Carey, Larry N., Carr, Michael A., Castander, Francisco J., Chiu, Kuenley, Collinge, Matthew J., Connolly, A. J., Covey, Kevin R., Csabai, Istvn, Dalcanton, Julianne J., Dodelson, Scott, Doi, Mamoru, Dong, Feng, Eisenstein, Daniel James, Evans, Michael L., Fan, Xiaohui, Feldman, Paul D., Finkbeiner, Douglas, Friedman, Scott D., Frieman, Joshua A., Fukugita, Masataka, Gal, Roy R., Gillespie, Bruce, Glazebrook, Karl, Gonzalez, Carlos F., Gray, Jim, Grebel, Eva K., Grodnicki, Lauren, Gunn, James E., Gurbani, Vijay K., Hall, Patrick B., Hao, Lei, Harbeck, Daniel, Harris, Frederick H., Harris, Hugh C., Harvanek, Michael, Hawley, Suzanne L., Heckman, Timothy M., Helmboldt, J. F., Hendry, John S., Hennessy, Gregory S., Hindsley, Robert B., Hogg, David W., Holmgren, Donald J., Holtzman, Jon A., Homer, Lee, Hui, Lam, Ichikawa, Shin-ichi, Ichikawa, Takashi, Inkmann, John P., Ivezic, Zeljko, Jester, Sebastian, Johnston, David E., Jordan, Beatrice, Jordan, Wendell P., Jorgensen, Anders M., Juri, Mario, Kauffmann, Guinevere, Kent, Stephen M., Kleinman, S. J., Knapp, G. R., Kniazev, Alexei Y., Kron, Richard G., Krzesiski, Jurek, Kunszt, Peter Z., Kuropatkin, Nickolai, Lamb, Donald Q., Lampeitl, Hubert, Laubscher, Bryan E., Lee, Brian C., Leger, R. French, Li, Nolan, Lidz, Adam, Lin, Huan, Loh, Yeong-Shang, Long, Daniel C., Loveday, Jon, Lupton, Robert H., Malik, Tanu, Margon, Bruce, McGehee, Peregrine M., McKay, Timothy A., Meiksin, Avery, Miknaitis, Gajus A., Moorthy, Bhasker K., Munn, Jeffrey A., Murphy, Tara, Nakajima, Reiko, Narayanan, Vijay K., Nash, Thomas, Neilsen, Eric H. Jr., Newberg, Heidi Jo, Newman, Peter R., Nichol, Robert C., Nicinski, Tom, Nieto-Santisteban, Maria, Nitta, Atsuko, Odenkirchen, Michael, Okamura, Sadanori, Ostriker, Jeremiah P., Owen, Russell, Padmanabhan, Nikhil, Peoples, John, Pier, Jeffrey R., Pindor, Bartosz, Pope, Adrian C., Quinn, Thomas R., Rafikov, R. R., Raymond, Sean N., Richards, Gordon T., Richmond, Michael W., Rix, Hans-Walter, Rockosi, Constance M., Schaye, Joop, Schlegel, David J., Schneider, Donald P., Schroeder, Joshua, Scranton, Ryan, Sekiguchi, Maki, Seljak, Uro, Sergey, Gary, Sesar, Branimir, Sheldon, Erin, Shimasaku, Kazu, Siegmund, Walter A., Silvestri, Nicole M., Sinisgalli, Allan J., Sirko, Edwin, Smith, J. Allyn, Smoli, Vernesa, Snedden, Stephanie A., Stebbins, Albert, Steinhardt, Charles, Stinson, Gregory, Stoughton, Chris, Strateva, Iskra V., Strauss, Michael A., SubbaRao, Mark, Szalay, Alexander S., Szapudi, Istvn, Szkody, Paula, Tasca, Lidia, Tegmark, Max, Thakar, Aniruddha R., Tremonti, Christy, Tucker, Douglas L., Uomoto, Alan, Vanden Berk, Daniel E., Vandenberg, Jan, Vogeley, Michael S., Voges, Wolfgang, Vogt, Nicole P., Walkowicz, Lucianne M., Weinberg, David H., West, Andrew A., White, Simon D. M., Wilhite, Brian C., Willman, Beth, Xu, Yongzhong, Yanny, Brian, Yarger, Jean, Yasuda, Naoki, Yip, Ching-Wa, Yocum, D. R., York, Donald G., Zakamska, Nadia L., Zehavi, Idit, Zheng, Wei, Zibetti, Stefano, and Zucker, Daniel B.
- Subjects
atlases ,catalogs ,surveys - Abstract
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) has validated and made publicly available its First Data Release. This consists of 2099 deg2 of five-band (u, g, r, i, z) imaging data, 186,240 spectra of galaxies, quasars, stars and calibrating blank sky patches selected over 1360 deg2 of this area, and tables of measured parameters from these data. The imaging data go to a depth of r ≈ 22.6 and are photometrically and astrometrically calibrated to 2% rms and 100 mas rms per coordinate, respectively. The spectra cover the range 3800–9200 Å, with a resolution of 1800–2100. This paper describes the characteristics of the data with emphasis on improvements since the release of commissioning data (the SDSS Early Data Release) and serves as a pointer to extensive published and on-line documentation of the survey., Astronomy
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- 2003
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18. Optical and Radio Properties of Extragalactic Sources Observed by the FIRST Survey and the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
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Ivezić, Željko, Menou, Kristen, Knapp, Gillian R., Strauss, Michael A., Lupton, Robert H., Vanden Berk, Daniel E., Richards, Gordon T., Tremonti, Christy, Weinstein, Michael A., Anderson, Scott, Bahcall, Neta A., Becker, Robert H., Bernardi, Mariangela, Blanton, Michael, Eisenstein, Daniel, Fan, Xiaohui, Finkbeiner, Douglas, Finlator, Kristian, Frieman, Joshua, Gunn, James E., Hall, Pat B., Kim, Rita S. J., Kinkhabwala, Ali, Narayanan, Vijay K., Rockosi, Constance M., Schlegel, David, Schneider, Donald P., Strateva, Iskra, SubbaRao, Mark, Thakar, Aniruddha R., Voges, Wolfgang, White, Richard L., Yanny, Brian, Brinkmann, Jonathan, Doi, Mamoru, Fukugita, Masataka, Hennessy, Gregory S., Munn, Jeffrey A., Nichol, Robert C., and York, Donald G.
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galaxies: active ,galaxies: photometry ,quasars: general ,radio continuum - Abstract
We discuss the optical and radio properties of ~30,000 FIRST (radio, 20 cm, sensitive to 1 mJy) sources positionally associated within 1farcs5 with a Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) (optical, sensitive to r* ~ 22.2) source in 1230 deg2 of sky. The matched sample represents ~30% of the 108,000 FIRST sources and 0.1% of the 2.5 × 107 SDSS sources in the studied region. SDSS spectra are available for 4300 galaxies and 1154 quasars from the matched sample and for a control sample of 140,000 galaxies and 20,000 quasars in 1030 deg2 of sky. Here we analyze only core sources, which dominate the sample; the fraction of SDSS-FIRST sources with complex radio morphology is determined to be less than 10%. This large and unbiased catalog of optical identifications provides much firmer statistical footing for existing results and allows several new findings. The majority (83%) of the FIRST sources identified with an SDSS source brighter than r* = 21 are optically resolved; the fraction of resolved objects among the matched sources is a function of the radio flux, increasing from ~50% at the bright end to ~90% at the FIRST faint limit. Nearly all optically unresolved radio sources have nonstellar colors indicative of quasars. We estimate an upper limit of ~5% for the fraction of quasars with broadband optical colors indistinguishable from those of stars. The distribution of quasars in the radio flux–optical flux plane suggests the existence of the "quasar radio dichotomy"; 8% ± 1% of all quasars with i* < 18.5 are radio-loud, and this fraction seems independent of redshift and optical luminosity. The radio-loud quasars have a redder median color by 0.08 ± 0.02 mag, and show a 3 times larger fraction of objects with extremely red colors. FIRST galaxies represent 5% of all SDSS galaxies with r* < 17.5, and 1% for r* < 20, and are dominated by red (u*-r* > 2.22) galaxies, especially those with r* > 17.5. Magnitude- and redshift-limited samples show that radio galaxies have a different optical luminosity distribution than nonradio galaxies selected by the same criteria; when galaxies are further separated by their colors, this result remains valid for both blue and red galaxies. For a given optical luminosity and redshift, the observed optical colors of radio galaxies are indistinguishable from those of all SDSS galaxies selected by identical criteria. The distributions of radio-to-optical flux ratio are similar for blue and red galaxies in redshift-limited samples; this similarity implies that the difference in their luminosity functions and resulting selection effects are the dominant cause for the preponderance of red radio galaxies in flux-limited samples. The fraction of radio galaxies whose emission-line ratios indicate an AGN (30%), rather than starburst, origin is 6 times larger than the corresponding fraction for all SDSS galaxies (r* < 17.5). We confirm that the AGN-to-starburst galaxy number ratio increases with radio flux and find that radio emission from AGNs is more concentrated than radio emission from starburst galaxies., Astronomy
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- 2002
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19. Composite Quasar Spectra from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
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Vanden Berk, Daniel E., Richards, Gordon T., Bauer, Amanda, Strauss, Michael A., Schneider, Donald P., Heckman, Timothy M., York, Donald G., Hall, Patrick B., Fan, Xiaohui, Knapp, G. R., Anderson, Scott F., Annis, James, Bahcall, Neta A., Bernardi, Mariangela, Briggs, John W., Brinkmann, J., Brunner, Robert, Burles, Scott, Carey, Larry, Castander, Francisco J., Connolly, A. J., Crocker, J. H., Csabai, István, Doi, Mamoru, Finkbeiner, Douglas, Friedman, Scott, Frieman, Joshua A., Fukugita, Masataka, Gunn, James E., Hennessy, G. S., Ivezic, Zeljko, Kent, Stephen, Kunszt, Peter Z., Lamb, D. Q., Leger, R. French, Long, Daniel C., Loveday, Jon, Lupton, Robert H., Meiksin, Avery, Merelli, Aronne, Munn, Jeffrey A., Newberg, Heidi Jo, Newcomb, Matt, Nichol, R. C., Owen, Russell, Pier, Jeffrey R., Pope, Adrian, Rockosi, Constance M., Schlegel, David J., Siegmund, Walter A., Smee, Stephen, Snir, Yehuda, Stoughton, Chris, Stubbs, Christopher William, SubbaRao, Mark, Szalay, Alexander S., Szokoly, Gyula P., Tremonti, Christy, Uomoto, Alan, Waddell, Patrick, Yanny, Brian, and Zheng, Wei
- Subjects
quasars : emission lines ,quasars : general - Abstract
We have created a variety of composite quasar spectra using a homogeneous data set of over 2200 spectra from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). The quasar sample spans a redshift range of 0.044 ≤ z ≤ 4.789 and an absolute r' magnitude range of -18.0 to -26.5. The input spectra cover an observed wavelength range of 3800–9200 Å at a resolution of 1800. The median composite covers a rest-wavelength range from 800 to 8555 Å and reaches a peak signal-to-noise ratio of over 300 per 1 Å resolution element in the rest frame. We have identified over 80 emission-line features in the spectrum. Emission-line shifts relative to nominal laboratory wavelengths are seen for many of the ionic species. Peak shifts of the broad permitted and semiforbidden lines are strongly correlated with ionization energy, as previously suggested, but we find that the narrow forbidden lines are also shifted by amounts that are strongly correlated with ionization energy. The magnitude of the forbidden line shifts is lesssim100 km s-1, compared with shifts of up to 550 km s-1 for some of the permitted and semiforbidden lines. At wavelengths longer than the Lyα emission, the continuum of the geometric mean composite is well fitted by two power laws, with a break at ≈5000 Å. The frequency power-law index, αν, is -0.44 from ≈1300 to 5000 Å and -2.45 redward of ≈5000 Å. The abrupt change in slope can be accounted for partly by host-galaxy contamination at low redshift. Stellar absorption lines, including higher order Balmer lines, seen in the composites suggest that young or intermediate-age stars make a significant contribution to the light of the host galaxies. Most of the spectrum is populated by blended emission lines, especially in the range 1500–3500 Å, which can make the estimation of quasar continua highly uncertain unless large ranges in wavelength are observed. An electronic table of the median quasar template is available., Astronomy
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- 2001
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20. Colors of 2625 Quasars at 0 < z < 5 Measured in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Photometric System
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Richards, Gordon T., Fan, Xiaohui, Schneider, Donald P., Vanden Berk, Daniel E., Strauss, Michael A., York, Donald G., Anderson, Jr., John E., Anderson, Scott F., Annis, James, Bahcall, Neta A., Bernardi, Mariangela, Briggs, John W., Brinkmann, J., Brunner, Robert, Burles, Scott, Carey, Larry, Castander, Francisco J., Connolly, A. J., Crocker, J. H., Csabai, István, Doi, Mamoru, Finkbeiner, Douglas, Friedman, Scott D., Frieman, Joshua A., Fukugita, Masataka, Gunn, James E., Hindsley, Robert B., Ivezic, Zeljko, Kent, Stephen, Knapp, G. R., Lamb, D. Q., Leger, R. French, Long, Daniel C., Loveday, Jon, Lupton, Robert H., McKay, Timothy A., Meiksin, Avery, Merrelli, Aronne, Munn, Jeffrey A., Newberg, Heidi Jo, Newcomb, Matt, Nichol, R. C., Owen, Russell, Pier, Jeffrey R., Pope, Adrian, Richmond, Michael W., Rockosi, Constance M., Schlegel, David J., Siegmund, Walter A., Smee, Stephen, Snir, Yehuda, Stoughton, Chris, Stubbs, Christopher William, SubbaRao, Mark, Szalay, Alexander S., Szokoly, Gyula P., Tremonti, Christy, Uomoto, Alan, Waddell, Patrick, Yanny, Brian, and Zheng, Wei
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catalogs ,quasars: general ,surveys - Abstract
We present an empirical investigation of the colors of quasars in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) photometric system. The sample studied includes 2625 quasars with SDSS photometry: 1759 quasars found during SDSS spectroscopic commissioning and SDSS follow-up observations on other telescopes, 50 matches to FIRST quasars, 573 matches to quasars from the NASA Extragalactic Database, and 243 quasars from two or more of these sources. The quasars are distributed in a 2fdg5 wide stripe centered on the celestial equator covering ~529 deg2. Positions (accurate to 0farcs2) and SDSS magnitudes are given for the 898 quasars known prior to SDSS spectroscopic commissioning. New SDSS quasars, which range in brightness from i* = 15.39 to the photometric magnitude limit of the survey, represent an increase of over 200% in the number of known quasars in this area of the sky. The ensemble average of the observed colors of quasars in the SDSS passbands are well represented by a power-law continuum with αν = -0.5 (fν ∝ να) and are close to those predicted by previous simulations. However, the contributions of the "small blue (or λ3000) bump" and other strong emission lines have a significant effect upon the colors. The color-redshift relation exhibits considerable structure, which may be of use in determining photometric redshifts for quasars from their colors alone. The range of colors at a given redshift can generally be accounted for by a range in the optical spectral index with a distribution αν = -0.5 ± 0.65 (95% confidence), but there is a red tail in the distribution. This tail may be a sign of internal reddening, especially since fainter objects at a given redshift tend to exhibit redder colors than the average. Finally, we show that there is a continuum of properties between quasars and Seyfert galaxies, and we test the validity of the traditional dividing line (MB = -23) between the two classes of active galactic nuclei., Astronomy
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- 2001
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21. FAINT NEAR-ULTRAVIOLET/FAR-ULTRAVIOLET STANDARDS FROM SWIFT/UVOT, GALEX, AND SDSS PHOTOMETRY.
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Siegel, Michael H., Hoversten, Erik A., Roming, Peter W. A., Landsman, Wayne B., Allende Prieto, Carlos, Breeveld, Alice A., Brown, Peter, Holland, Stephen T., Kuin, N. P. M., Page, Mathew J., and Vanden Berk, Daniel E.
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- 2010
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22. PROBING THE ORIGINS OF THE C IV AND Fe Kα BALDWIN EFFECTS.
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Wu, Jian, Vanden Berk, Daniel E., Brandt, W. N., Schneider, Donald P., Gibson, Robert R., and Wu, Jianfeng
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- 2009
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23. ULTRAVIOLET LIGHT CURVES OF SUPERNOVAE WITH THE SWIFT ULTRAVIOLET/OPTICAL TELESCOPE.
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Brown, Peter J., Holland, Stephen T., Immler, Stefan, Milne, Peter, Roming, Peter W. A., Gehrels, Neil, Nousek, John, Panagia, Nino, Still, Martin, and Vanden Berk, Daniel
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- 2009
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24. Average Properties of a Large Sample of zabs ~ zem Associated Mg II Absorption Line Systems.
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Vanden Berk, Daniel, Khare, Pushpa, York, Donald G., Richards, Gordon T., Lundgren, Britt, Alsayyad, Yusra, Kulkarni, Varsha P., SubbaRao, Mark, Schneider, Donald P., Heckman, Tim, Anderson, Scott, Crotts, Arlin P. S., Frieman, Josh, Stoughton, C., Lauroesch, James T., Hall, Patrick B., Meiksin, Avery, Steffing, Michael, and Vanlandingham, Johnny
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- 2008
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25. The Effect of Variability on the Estimation of Quasar Black Hole Masses.
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Wilhite, Brian C., Brunner, Robert J., Schneider, Donald P., and Vanden Berk, Daniel E.
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- 2007
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26. Swift and XMM-Newton Observations of the Extraordinary Gamma-Ray Burst 060729: More than 125 Days of X-Ray Afterglow.
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Grupe, Dirk, Gronwall, Caryl, Wang, Xiang-Yu, Roming, Peter W. A., Cummings, Jay, Zhang, Bing, Mészáros, Peter, Trigo, Maria Diaz, O’Brien, Paul T., Page, Kim L., Beardmore, Andy, Godet, Olivier, vanden Berk, Daniel E., Brown, Peter J., Koch, Scott, Morris, David, Stroh, Michael, Burrows, David N., Nousek, John A., and McMath Chester, Margaret
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- 2007
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27. Clustering of High-Redshift (z ≥ 2.9) Quasars from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey.
- Author
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Shen, Yue, Strauss, Michael A., Oguri, Masamune, Hennawi, Joseph F., Fan, Xiaohui, Richards, Gordon T., Hall, Patrick B., Gunn, James E., Schneider, Donald P., Szalay, Alexander S., Thakar, Anirudda R., Vanden Berk, Daniel E., Anderson, Scott F., Bahcall, Neta A., Connolly, Andrew J., and Knapp, Gillian R.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Redshift Filtering by Swift Apparent X-Ray Column Density.
- Author
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Grupe, Dirk, Nousek, John A., vanden Berk, Daniel E., Roming, Peter W. A., Burrows, David N., Godet, Olivier, Osborne, Julian, and Gehrels, Neil
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. The UV Properties of SDSS-Selected Quasars.
- Author
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Trammell, George B., Vanden Berk, Daniel E., Schneider, Donald P., Richards, Gordon T., Hall, Patrick B., Anderson, Scott F., and Brinkmann, J.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. A Large, Uniform Sample of X-Ray-emitting Active Galactic Nuclei from the ROSAT All Sky and Sloan Digital Sky Surveys: The Data Release 5 Sample.
- Author
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Anderson, Scott F., Margon, Bruce, Voges, Wolfgang, Plotkin, Richard M., Syphers, David, Haggard, Daryl, Collinge, Matthew J., Meyer, Jillian, Strauss, Michael A., Agüeros, Marcel A., Hall, Patrick B., Homer, L., Ivezić, Željko, Richards, Gordon T., Richmond, Michael W., Schneider, Donald P., Stinson, Gregory, Vanden Berk, Daniel E., and York, Donald G.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Very Early Optical Afterglows of Gamma-Ray Bursts: Evidence for Relative Paucity of Detection.
- Author
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Roming, Peter W. A., Schady, Patricia, Fox, Derek B., Zhang, Bing, Liang, Enwei, Mason, Keith O., Rol, Evert, Burrows, David N., Blustin, Alex J., Boyd, Patricia T., Brown, Peter, Holland, Stephen T., McGowan, Katherine, Landsman, Wayne B., Page, Kim L., Rhoads, James E., Rosen, Simon R., Vanden Berk, Daniel, Barthelmy, Scott D., and Breeveld, Alice A.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. GRB 060313: A New Paradigm for Short-Hard Bursts?
- Author
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Roming, Peter W. A., Vanden Berk, Daniel, Pal’shin, Valentin, Pagani, Claudio, Norris, Jay, Kumar, Pawan, Krimm, Hans, Holland, Stephen T., Gronwall, Caryl, Blustin, Alex J., Zhang, Bing, Schady, Patricia, Sakamoto, Takanori, Osborne, Julian P., Nousek, John A., Marshall, Frank E., Mészáros, Peter, Golenetskii, Sergey V., Gehrels, Neil, and Frederiks, Dmitry D.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Spectral Energy Distributions and Multiwavelength Selection of Type 1 Quasars.
- Author
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Richards, Gordon T., Lacy, Mark, Storrie-Lombardi, Lisa J., Hall, Patrick B., Gallagher, S. C., Hines, Dean C., Fan, Xiaohui, Papovich, Casey, Vanden Berk, Daniel E., Trammell, George B., Schneider, Donald P., Vestergaard, Marianne, York, Donald G., Jester, Sebastian, Anderson, Scott F., Budavári, Tamás, and Szalay, Alexander S.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. QSO Absorption Lines from QSOS.
- Author
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Bowen, David V., Hennawi, Joseph F., Ménard, Brice, Chelouche, Doron, Inada, Naohisa, Oguri, Masamune, Richards, Gordon T., Strauss, Michael A., Vanden Berk, Daniel E., and York, Donald G.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. A Catalog of Broad Absorption Line Quasars from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Third Data Release.
- Author
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Trump, Jonathan R., Hall, Patrick B., Reichard, Timothy A., Richards, Gordon T., Schneider, Donald P., Vanden Berk, Daniel E., Knapp, Gillian R., Anderson, Scott F., Fan, Xiaohui, Brinkman, J., Kleinman, S. J., and Nitta, Atsuko
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Quasar Survey: Quasar Luminosity Function from Data Release 3.
- Author
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Richards, Gordon T., Strauss, Michael A., Fan, Xiaohui, Hall, Patrick B., Jester, Sebastian, Schneider, Donald P., Vanden Berk, Daniel E., Stoughton, Chris, Anderson, Scott F., Brunner, Robert J., Gray, Jim, Gunn, James E., Ivezić, Željko, Kirkland, Margaret K., Knapp, G. R., Loveday, Jon, Meiksin, Avery, Pope, Adrian, Szalay, Alexander S., and Thakar, Anirudda R.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Characteristic QSO Accretion Disk Temperatures from Spectroscopic Continuum Variability.
- Author
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Pereyra, Nicolas A., Vanden Berk, Daniel E., Turnshek, David A., Hillier, D. John, Wilhite, Brian C., Kron, Richard G., Schneider, Donald P., and Brinkmann, Jonathan
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The Lyα Forest Power Spectrum from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey.
- Author
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McDonald, Patrick, Seljak, Uroš, Burles, Scott, Schlegel, David J., Weinberg, David H., Cen, Renyue, Shih, David, Schaye, Joop, Schneider, Donald P., Bahcall, Neta A., Briggs, John W., Brinkmann, J., Brunner, Robert J., Fukugita, Masataka, Gunn, James E., Ivezić, Željko, Kent, Stephen, Lupton, Robert H., and Vanden Berk, Daniel E.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Spectral Decomposition of Broad-Line AGNs and Host Galaxies.
- Author
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Vanden Berk, Daniel E., Shen, Jiajian, Yip, Ching-Wa, Schneider, Donald P., Connolly, Andrew J., Burton, Ross E., Jester, Sebastian, Hall, Patrick B., Szalay, Alex S., and Brinkmann, John
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. The Linear Theory Power Spectrum from the Lyα Forest in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey.
- Author
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McDonald, Patrick, Seljak, Uroš, Cen, Renyue, Shih, David, Weinberg, David H., Burles, Scott, Schneider, Donald P., Schlegel, David J., Bahcall, Neta A., Briggs, John W., Brinkmann, J., Fukugita, Masataka, Ivezić, Željko, Kent, Stephen, and Vanden Berk, Daniel E.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Spectral Variability of Quasars in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. I. Wavelength Dependence.
- Author
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Wilhite, Brian C., Vanden Berk, Daniel E., Kron, Richard G., Schneider, Donald P., Pereyra, Nicholas, Brunner, Robert J., Richards, Gordon T., and Brinkmann, Jonathan V.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The Sloan Digital Sky Survey View of the Palomar-Green Bright Quasar Survey.
- Author
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Jester, Sebastian, Schneider, Donald P., Richards, Gordon T., Green, Richard F., Schmidt, Maarten, Hall, Patrick B., Strauss, Michael A., Vanden Berk, Daniel E., Stoughton, Chris, Gunn, James E., Brinkmann, Jon, Kent, Stephen M., Smith, J. Allyn, Tucker, Douglas L., and Yanny, Brian
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The Ultraviolet, Optical, and Infrared Properties of Sloan Digital Sky Survey Sources Detected by GALEX.
- Author
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Agüeros, Marcel A., Ivezić, Željko, Covey, Kevin R., Obrić, Mirela, Hao, Lei, Walkowicz, Lucianne M., West, Andrew A., Vanden Berk, Daniel E., Lupton, Robert H., Knapp, Gillian R., Gunn, James E., Richards, Gordon T., Bochanski, Jr., John, Brooks, Alyson, Claire, Mark, Haggard, Daryl, Kaib, Nathan, Kimball, Amy, Gogarten, Stephanie M., and Seth, Anil
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Soft X-Ray and Ultraviolet Emission Relations in Optically Selected AGN Samples.
- Author
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Strateva, Iskra V., Brandt, W. N., Schneider, Donald P., Vanden Berk, Daniel G., and Vignali, Cristian
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Quasar Catalog. III. Third Data Release.
- Author
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Schneider, Donald P., Hall, Patrick B., Richards, Gordon T., Vanden Berk, Daniel E., Anderson, Scott F., Fan, Xiaohui, Jester, Sebastian, Stoughton, Chris, Strauss, Michael A., SubbaRao, Mark, Brandt, W. N., Gunn, James E., Yanny, Brian, Bahcall, Neta A., Barentine, J. C., Blanton, Michael R., Boroski, William N., Brewington, Howard J., Brinkmann, J., and Brunner, Robert
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. X-Ray Insights into Interpreting C IV Blueshifts and Optical/Ultraviolet Continua.
- Author
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Gallagher, S. C., Richards, Gordon T., Hall, Patrick B., Brandt, W. N., Schneider, Donald P., and Vanden Berk, Daniel E.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Efficient Photometric Selection of Quasars from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey: 100,000 z < 3 Quasars from Data Release One.
- Author
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Richards, Gordon T., Nichol, Robert C., Gray, Alexander G., Brunner, Robert J., Lupton, Robert H., Vanden Berk, Daniel E., Chong, Shang Shan, Weinstein, Michael A., Schneider, Donald P., Anderson, Scott F., Munn, Jeffrey A., Harris, Hugh C., Strauss, Michael A., Fan, Xiaohui, Gunn, James E., Ivezić, Željko, York, Donald G., Brinkmann, J., and Moore, Andrew W.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Dust Reddening in Sloan Digital Sky Survey Quasars.
- Author
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Hopkins, Philip F., Strauss, Michael A., Hall, Patrick B., Richards, Gordon T., Cooper, Ariana S., Schneider, Donald P., Vanden Berk, Daniel E., Jester, Sebastian, Brinkmann, J., and Szokoly, Gyula P.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Double-damped Lyα Absorption: A Possible Large Neutral Hydrogen Gas Filament near Redshift z = 1.
- Author
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Turnshek, David A., Rao, Sandhya M., Nestor, Daniel B., Vanden Berk, Daniel, Belfort-Mihalyi, Michèle, and Monier, Eric M.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. A Lyα-only Active Galactic Nucleus from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey.
- Author
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Hall, Patrick B., Hoversten, Erik A., Tremonti, Christy A., Vanden Berk, Daniel E., Schneider, Donald P., Strauss, Michael A., Knapp, Gillian R., York, Donald G., Hutsemékers, Damien, Newman, P. R., Brinkmann, J., Frye, Brenda, Fukugita, Masataka, Glazebrook, Karl, Harvanek, Michael, Heckman, Timothy M., Ivezić, Željko, Kleinman, S., Krzesinski, Jurek, and Long, Daniel C.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
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