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The LAMOST Survey of Background Quasars in the Vicinity of the Andromeda and Triangulum Galaxies. II. Results from the Commissioning Observations and the Pilot Surveys

Authors :
Genrong Liu
Zhenchao Zhang
Yuan Tian
Jia-Ning Wang
Ming-Zhi Wei
Fang Zhou
Zhongwen Hu
Yong-Hui Hou
Huo-Ming Shi
Wei Zhang
Zhong-Rui Bai
Lei Wang
Ji-Jun Ni
Yanxia Zhang
Dan Wang
Haotong Zhang
Ya-Juan Lei
Qi-Shuai Lu
Yongheng Zhao
Gang Wang
Xin-Lin Zhou
Mao-Sheng Xiang
Zheng-Qiu Yao
Xin-Nan Li
Hong-Zhuan Hu
Aihua Li
Ye-Ping Li
Xiao-Yan Chen
Ming Zhao
Liang-Ping Tu
Yongtian Zhu
Yue-Fei Wang
Jian Li
Fengfei Wang
H.-L. Yuan
En-Peng Zhang
Yong-Jun Qi
Yan Li
Yaoquan Chu
Jian-Jun Chen
Jian-Rong Shi
Guang-Wei Li
Lin Yan
Yue Wu
Jia-Ru Chu
Xiangqun Cui
Yu Luo
Xiaowei Liu
Yong Zhang
Xiang-Xiang Xue
You Wang
Zhi-Ying Huo
Zheng-Hong Tang
Zhaoxiang Qi
Zhi-Gang Liu
Li Men
Yang Huang
Gang Zhao
Lei Jia
Haibo Yuan
Fang-Hua Jiang
Jian-Nan Zhang
Shi-Wei Sun
H. W. Zhang
Bing Du
A-Li Luo
Si-Cheng Zou
Chao Zhai
Yong Yu
Guoping Li
Shu-Qing Wang
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
American Astronomical Society, 2013.

Abstract

We present new quasars discovered in the vicinity of the Andromeda and Triangulum galaxies with the LAMOST during the 2010 and 2011 observational seasons. Quasar candidates are selected based on the available SDSS, KPNO 4 m telescope, XSTPS optical, and WISE near infrared photometric data. We present 509 new quasars discovered in a stripe of ~135 sq. deg from M31 to M33 along the Giant Stellar Stream in the 2011 pilot survey datasets, and also 17 new quasars discovered in an area of ~100 sq. deg that covers the central region and the southeastern halo of M31 in the 2010 commissioning datasets. These 526 new quasars have i magnitudes ranging from 15.5 to 20.0, redshifts from 0.1 to 3.2. They represent a significant increase of the number of identified quasars in the vicinity of M31 and M33. There are now 26, 62 and 139 known quasars in this region of the sky with i magnitudes brighter than 17.0, 17.5 and 18.0 respectively, of which 5, 20 and 75 are newly-discovered. These bright quasars provide an invaluable collection with which to probe the kinematics and chemistry of the ISM/IGM in the Local Group of galaxies. A total of 93 quasars are now known with locations within 2.5 deg of M31, of which 73 are newly discovered. Tens of quasars are now known to be located behind the Giant Stellar Stream, and hundreds behind the extended halo and its associated substructures of M31. The much enlarged sample of known quasars in the vicinity of M31 and M33 can potentially be utilized to construct a perfect astrometric reference frame to measure the minute PMs of M31 and M33, along with the PMs of substructures associated with the Local Group of galaxies. Those PMs are some of the most fundamental properties of the Local Group.<br />26 pages, 6 figures, AJ accepted

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....187d987d75ad9a44fecfe7fb850aa9a9