IGAPS: the merged IPHAS and UVEX optical surveys of the northern Galactic plane

Monguió, M.; Greimel, R.; Drew, J. E.; Barentsen, G.; Groot, P. J.; Irwin, M. J.; Casares, J.; Gänsicke, B. T.; Carter, P. J.; Corral-Santana, J. M.; Gentile-Fusillo, N. P.; Greiss, S.; van Haaften, L. M.; Hollands, M.; Jones, D.; Kupfer, T.; Manser, C. J.; Murphy, D. N. A.; McLeod, A. F.; Oosting, T.; Parker, Q. A.; Pyrzas, S.; Rodríguez-Gil, P.; van Roestel, J.; Scaringi, S.; Schellart, P.; Toloza, O.; Vaduvescu, O.; van Spaandonk, L.; Verbeek, K.; Wright, N. J.; Eislöffel, J.; Fabregat, J.; Harris, A.; Morris, R. A. H.; Phillipps, S.; Raddi, R.; Sabin, L.; Unruh, Y.; Vink, J. S.; Wesson, R.; Cardwell, A.; de Burgos, A.; Cochrane, R. K.; Doostmohammadi, S.; Mocnik, T.; Stoev, H.; Suárez-Andrés, L.; Tudor, V.; Wilson, T. G.; Zegmott, T. J.
Bibliographical reference

Astronomy and Astrophysics

Advertised on:
6
2020
Number of authors
51
IAC number of authors
5
Citations
27
Refereed citations
25
Description
The INT Galactic Plane Survey (IGAPS) is the merger of the optical photometric surveys, IPHAS and UVEX, based on data from the Isaac Newton Telescope (INT) obtained between 2003 and 2018. Here, we present the IGAPS point source catalogue. It contains 295.4 million rows providing photometry in the filters, i, r, narrow-band Hα, g, and URGO. The IGAPS footprint fills the Galactic coordinate range, |b| < 5° and 30° < ℓ < 215°. A uniform calibration, referred to as the Pan-STARRS system, is applied to g, r, and i, while the Hα calibration is linked to r and then is reconciled via field overlaps. The astrometry in all five bands has been recalculated in the reference frame of Gaia Data Release 2. Down to i ∼ 20 mag (Vega system), most stars are also detected in g, r, and Hα. As exposures in the r band were obtained in both the IPHAS and UVEX surveys, typically a few years apart, the catalogue includes two distinct r measures, rI and rU. The r 10σ limiting magnitude is approximately 21, with median seeing of 1.1 arcsec. Between approximately 13th and 19th mag in all bands, the photometry is internally reproducible to within 0.02 mag. Stars brighter than r = 19.5 mag are tested for narrow-band Hα excess signalling line emission, and for variation exceeding |rI - rU| = 0.2 mag. We find and flag 8292 candidate emission line stars and over 53 000 variables (both at > 5σ confidence).

The catalogue of 174 columns in total and full Tables D.1-D.4 are only available at the CDS via anonymous ftp to http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.frftp://130.79.128.5) or via http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr/viz-bin/cat/J/A+A/638/A18
Related projects
Izquierda - Imagen RGB de la nebulosa de Orión y M43 obtenida filtros estrechos con la cámara WFC en el INT: H alfa (rojo), [S II] 6716+30 (verde), [O III] 5007 (azul). Derecha - Imagen en falso color de la nebulosa planetaria NGC 6778. En azul se ve la emisión en la línea de O II tomada con el filtro sintonizable azul del instrumento OSIRIS en el GTC; en verde imagen con el filtro estrecho de [O III] del Nordic Optical Telescope (NOT).
Physics of Ionized Nebulae

The research that is being carried out by the group can be condensed into two main lines: 1) Study of the structure, dynamics, physical conditions and chemical evolution of Galactic and extragalactic ionized nebulae through detailed analysis and modelization of their spectra. Investigation of chemical composition gradients along the disk of our

Jorge
García Rojas
Representación de la variable cataclísmica SS Cygni (Chris Moran)
Binary Stars

The study of binary stars is essential to stellar astrophysics. A large number of stars form and evolve within binary systems. Therefore, their study is fundamental to understand stellar and galactic evolution. Particularly relevant is that binary systems are still the best source of precise stellar mass and radius measurements. Research lines

Pablo
Rodríguez Gil
Black hole in outburst
Black holes, neutron stars, white dwarfs and their local environment

Accreting black-holes and neutron stars in X-ray binaries provide an ideal laboratory for exploring the physics of compact objects, yielding not only confirmation of the existence of stellar mass black holes via dynamical mass measurements, but also the best opportunity for probing high-gravity environments and the physics of accretion; the most

Montserrat
Armas Padilla
Project Image
Minor Bodies of the Solar System

This project studies the physical and compositional properties of the so-called minor bodies of the Solar System, that includes asteroids, icy objects, and comets. Of special interest are the trans-neptunian objects (TNOs), including those considered the most distant objects detected so far (Extreme-TNOs or ETNOs); the comets and the comet-asteroid

Julia de
León Cruz