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The Sixth Data Release of the Radial Velocity Experiment (RAVE) -- I: Survey Description, Spectra and Radial Velocities

Authors :
Steinmetz, Matthias
Matijevic, Gal
Enke, Harry
Zwitter, Tomaz
Guiglion, Guillaume
McMillan, Paul J.
Kordopatis, Georges
Valentini, Marica
Chiappini, Cristina
Casagrande, Luca
Wojno, Jennifer
Anguiano, Borja
Bienayme, Olivier
Bijaoui, Albert
Binney, James
Burton, Donna
Cass, Paul
de Laverny, Patrick
Fiegert, Kristin
Freeman, Kenneth
Fulbright, Jon P.
Gibson, Brad K.
Gilmore, Gerard
Grebel, Eva K.
Helmi, Amina
Kunder, Andrea
Munari, Ulisse
Navarro, Julio F.
Parker, Quentin
Ruchti, Gregory R.
Recio-Blanco, Alejandra
Reid, Warren
Seabroke, George M.
Siviero, Alessandro
Siebert, Arnaud
Stupar, Milorad
Watson, Fred
Williams, Mary E. K.
Wyse, Rosemary F. G.
Anders, Friedrich
Antoja, Teresa
Birko, Danijela
Bland-Hawthorn, Joss
Bossini, Diego
Garcia, Rafael A.
Carrillo, Ismael
Chaplin, William J.
Elsworth, Yvonne
Famaey, Benoit
Gerhard, Ortwin
Jofre, Paula
Just, Andreas
Mathur, Savita
Miglio, Andrea
Minchev, Ivan
Monari, Giacomo
Mosser, Benoit
Ritter, Andreas
Rodrigues, Thaise S.
Scholz, Ralf-Dieter
Sharma, Sanjib
Sysoliatina, Kseniia
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The Radial Velocity Experiment (RAVE) is a magnitude-limited (9<I<12) spectroscopic survey of Galactic stars randomly selected in the southern hemisphere. The RAVE medium-resolution spectra (R~7500) cover the Ca-triplet region (8410-8795A). The 6th and final data release (DR6 or FDR) is based on 518387 observations of 451783 unique stars. RAVE observations were taken between 12 April 2003 and 4 April 2013. Here we present the genesis, setup and data reduction of RAVE as well as wavelength-calibrated and flux-normalized spectra and error spectra for all observations in RAVE DR6. Furthermore, we present derived spectral classification and radial velocities for the RAVE targets, complemented by cross matches with Gaia DR2 and other relevant catalogs. A comparison between internal error estimates, variances derived from stars with more than one observing epoch and a comparison with radial velocities of Gaia DR2 reveals consistently that 68% of the objects have a velocity accuracy better than 1.4 km/s, while 95% of the objects have radial velocities better than 4.0 km/s. Stellar atmospheric parameters, abundances and distances are presented in subsequent publication. The data can be accessed via the RAVE Web (http://rave-survey.org) or the Vizier database.<br />Comment: 32 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication to AJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2002.04377
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ab9ab9