Transformations between 2MASS, SDSS and BVRI photometric systems: bridging the near-infrared and optical

Bilir, S.; Ak, S.; Karaali, S.; Cabrera-Lavers, A.; Chonis, T. S.; Gaskell, C. M.
Bibliographical reference

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 384, Issue 3, pp. 1178-1188.

Advertised on:
3
2008
Number of authors
6
IAC number of authors
1
Citations
73
Refereed citations
65
Description
We present colour transformations for the conversion of the Two Micron All Sky Survey (2MASS) photometric system to the Johnson-Cousins UBVRI system and further into the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) ugriz system. We have taken SDSS gri magnitudes of stars measured with the 2.5-m telescope from SDSS Data Release 5 (DR5), and BVRI and JHKs magnitudes from Stetson's catalogue and Cutri et al., respectively. We matched thousands of stars in the three photometric systems by their coordinates and obtained a homogeneous sample of 825 stars by the following constraints, which are not used in previous transformations: (1) the data are dereddened, (2) giants are omitted and (3) the sample stars selected are of the highest quality. We give metallicity, population type and transformations dependent on two colours. The transformations provide absolute magnitude and distance determinations which can be used in space density evaluations at short distances where some or all of the SDSS ugriz magnitudes are saturated. The combination of these densities with those evaluated at larger distances using SDSS ugriz photometry will supply accurate Galactic model parameters, particularly the local space densities for each population.
Related projects
Project Image
Morphology and dynamics of the Milky Way

This project consists of two parts, each differentiated but both complementary: morphology and dynamics. Detailed study of the morphology of the Milky Way pretends to provide a data base for the stellar distribution in the most remote and heavily obscured regions of our Galaxy, through the development of semiempirical models based on the

Martín
López Corredoira