• Title/Summary/Keyword: astrometry

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VLBI Phase Referencing and Astrometry with KVN and KaVA

  • Jung, Taehyun;Byun, Do-Young;Sohn, Bong Won
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.40 no.1
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    • pp.54.2-54.2
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    • 2015
  • Phase referencing is an important tool to study weak radio sources, especially in mm-VLBI (Very Long Baseline Interferometry) which are usually too faint to be observed using conventional VLBI. VLBI astrometry is a unique method to measure the position and to identify radio emitting regions of a radio source with unprecedented angular resolution. In order to evaluate the phase referencing and astrometric capabilities of KVN and KaVA, several observations have been conducted and analyzed. I will present the observational results and discuss constraints and requirements for high precision VLBI astrometry.

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RADIO ASTROMETRIC OBSERVATIONS AND THE GALACTIC CONSTANT AS THE BASIS OF A GALACTIC KINEMATICS STUDY

  • NAGAYAMA, TAKUMI;OMODAKA, TOSHIHIRO;HANDA, TOSHIHIRO;KOBAYASHI, HIDEYUKI;BURNS, ROSS A.
    • Publications of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.30 no.2
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    • pp.115-118
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    • 2015
  • We made phase-referencing Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) observations of Galactic 22 GHz $H_2O$ maser sources with VLBI Exploration of Radio Astrometry (VERA). We measured the parallax distances of G48.61+0.02, G48.99-0.30, G49.19-0.34, ON1, IRAS 20056+3350, IRAS 20143+3634, ON2N, and IRAS 20126+4104, which are located near the tangent point and the Solar circle. The angular velocity of the Galactic rotation at the LSR (i.e. the ratio of the Galactic constants) is derived using the measured parallax distances and proper motions of these sources. The derived value of ${\Omega}_0=28.8{\pm}1.7km\;s^{-1}kpc^{-1}$ is consistent with recent values obtained using VLBI astrometry but 10% larger than the International Astronomical Union (IAU) recommended value of $25.9km\;s^{-1}kpc^{-1}=(220km\;s^{-1})$ / (8.5 kpc).

WFIRST ULTRA-PRECISE ASTROMETRY I: KUIPER BELT OBJECTS

  • Gould, Andrew
    • Journal of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.47 no.6
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    • pp.279-291
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    • 2014
  • I show that the WFIRST microlensing survey will enable detection and precision orbit determination of Kuiper Belt Objects (KBOs) down to $H_{vega}=28.2$ over an effective area of ${\sim}17deg^2$. Typical fractional period errors will be ${\sim}1.5%{\times}10^{0.4(H-28.2)}$ with similar errors in other parameters for roughly 5000 KBOs. Binary companions to detected KBOs can be detected to even fainter limits, $H_{vega}=29$, corresponding to R~30.5 and effective diameters D~7 km. For KBOs H~23, binary companions can be found with separations down to 10 mas. This will provide an unprecedented probe of orbital resonance and KBO mass measurements. More than a thousand stellar occultations by KBOs can be combined to determine the mean size as a function of KBO magnitude down to H~25. Current ground-based microlensing surveys can make a significant start on finding and characterizing KBOs using existing and soon-to-be-acquired data.

The recent activities for a precise astrometry using SFPR with KVN

  • Cho, Ilje;Jung, Taehyun;Sohn, Bongwon;Kino, Motoki;Zhao, Guangyao;Rioja, Maria Jose;Dodson, Richard;Agudo, Ivan
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.42 no.1
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    • pp.47.1-47.1
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    • 2017
  • Thanks to the quasi-optics system of KVN, the relative astrometry at different frequencies can be effectively achieved. In this talk, as a part of the KVN special session, we are going to present an important method making it possible, so called the source frequency phase referencing (SFPR). Based on the background, we will show our recent activities using the SFPR for the Galactic Center (Sgr A*) study, from its advantages on astrometric studies to the remained issues.

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VLBI Astrometry with Source Frequency Phase Referencing in KVN

  • Jung, Tae-Hyun;Rioja, Maria;Dodson, Richard;Sohn, Bong-Won
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.36 no.1
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    • pp.69.1-69.1
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    • 2011
  • The multi-band receiving feed which is one of the unique characteristics of the Korean VLBI Network (KVN) system compare to the other VLBI network enables to study precise astrometry with a source frequency phase referencing (SFPR) techniques. SFPR almost perfectly compensates the dominant non-dispersive tropospheric fluctuations by observing sources with multi-frequency simultaneously, and it also corrects the dispersive ionospheric fluctuations by adding a slow source-switching observation. In this talk, I will present the results from the KVN astrometric observations with SFPR and the achievable astrometric accuracy in KVN will be discussed.

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A BVR Photometric Survey of the Small Magellanic Cloud with a Mosaic CCD

  • Lee, Ki-Won
    • Journal of the Korean earth science society
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    • v.34 no.5
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    • pp.415-427
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    • 2013
  • We performed a BVR photometric survey for the entire Small Magellanic Cloud (~26 deg 2 ) with a mosaic system, Wide Field Imager (WFI), covering three seasons: September and October 2001 and November 2002. Through the usual data reduction procedures, we present ~0.73 million catalogue stars brighter than 19 magnitude in B amongst a total of ~1.3 million and compare them with published astrometry and photometry results. We found that the average differences between our and the published data are ~0.7 arcsec in astrometry and 0.065, 0.054, and 0.163 in B, V, and R, respectively, in photometry. In addition, using the 2dF spectroscopic data from Evans et al. (2004), we determined the color excesses in (B-V) and (V-R) to be $0.086{\pm}0.156$, and $0.065{\pm}0.112$, respectively, while for the distance modulus, we obtained $18.55{\pm}1.05$.

PULSARS AT PARKES

  • MANCHESTER R. N.
    • Journal of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.29 no.spc1
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    • pp.209-211
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    • 1996
  • Recent surveys at Parkes, in particular the 70 cm survey of the southern sky, have discovered many pulsars, including 17 miilisecond pulsars in the Galactic disk. Timing and polarization observations of some of these pulsars are described. The only two pulsars known to be in orbit around massive non-degenerate stellar compamons were also discovered at Parkes, and some recent observational results for these pulsars are also presented.

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MEASURING THE CORE SHIFT EFFECT IN AGN JETS WITH THE EXTENDED KOREAN VLBI NETWORK

  • JUNG, TAEHYUN;DODSON, RICHARD;HAN, SEOG-TAE;RIOJA, MARIA J.;BYUN, DO-YOUNG;HONMA, MAREKI;STEVENS, JAMIE;VICENTE, PABLO DE;SOHN, BONG WON
    • Journal of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.48 no.5
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    • pp.277-284
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    • 2015
  • We present our efforts for extending the simultaneous multi-frequency receiver system of the Korean Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) Network (KVN) to global baselines in order to measure the frequency-dependent position shifts in Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) jets, the so called core shift effect, with an unprecedented accuracy (a few micro-arcseconds). Millimeter VLBI observations with simultaneous multi-frequency receiver systems, like those of the KVN, enable us to explore the innermost regions of AGN and high precision astrometry. Such a system is capable of locating the frequency dependent opacity changes accurately. We have conducted the feasibility test-observations with the interested partners by implementing the KVN-compatible systems. Here we describe the science case for measuring the core shift effect in the AGN jet and report progress and future plans on extending the simultaneous multi-frequency system to global baselines.

WFIRST ULTRA-PRECISE ASTROMETRY II: ASTEROSEISMOLOGY

  • Gould, Andrew;Huber, Daniel;Penny, Matthew;Stello, Dennis
    • Journal of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.48 no.2
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    • pp.93-104
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    • 2015
  • WFIRST microlensing observations will return high-precision parallaxes, σ(π) . 0.3 µas, for the roughly 1 million stars with H < 14 in its 2.8 deg2 field toward the Galactic bulge. Combined with its 40,000 epochs of high precision photometry (∼ 0.7 mmag at Hvega = 14 and ∼ 0.1 mmag at H = 8), this will yield a wealth of asteroseismic data of giant stars, primarily in the Galactic bulge but includindvvvvvg a substantial fraction of disk stars at all Galactocentric radii interior to the Sun. For brighter stars, the astrometric data will yield an external check on the radii derived from the two asteroseismic parameters, the large-frequency separation <∆νnl> and the frequency of maximum oscillation power νmax, while for the fainter ones, it will enable a mass measurement from the single measurable asteroseismic parameter νmax. Simulations based on Kepler data indicate that WFIRST will be capable of detecting oscillations in stars from slightly less luminous than the red clump to the tip of the red giant branch, yielding roughly 1 million detections.

All-In-One Observing Software for Small Telescope

  • Han, Jimin;Pak, Soojong;Ji, Tae-Geun;Lee, Hye-In;Byeon, Seoyeon;Ahn, Hojae;Im, Myungshin
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.43 no.2
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    • pp.57.2-57.2
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    • 2018
  • In astronomical observation, sequential device control and real-time data processing are important to maximize observing efficiency. We have developed series of automatic observing software (KAOS, KHU Automatic Observing Software), e.g. KAOS30 for the 30 inch telescope in the McDonald Observatory and KAOS76 for the 76 cm telescope in the KHAO. The series consist of four packages: the DAP (Data Acquisition Package) for CCD Camera control, the TCP (Telescope Control Package) for telescope control, the AFP (Auto Focus Package) for focusing, and the SMP (Script Mode Package) for automation of sequences. In this poster, we introduce KAOS10 which is being developed for controlling a small telescope such as aperture size of 10 cm. The hardware components are the QHY8pro CCD, the QHY5-II CMOS, the iOptron CEM 25 mount, and the Stellarvue SV102ED telescope. The devices are controlled on ASCOM Platform. In addition to the previous packages (DAP, SMP, TCP), KAOS10 has QLP (Quick Look Package) and astrometry function in the TCP. QHY8pro CCD has RGB Bayer matrix and the QLP transforms RGB images into BVR images in real-time. The TCP includes astrometry function which adjusts the telescope position by comparing the image with a star catalog. In the future, We expect KAOS10 be used on the research of transient objects such as a variable star.

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