Difference between revisions of "Target selection for brc27"

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02/14/11  I have gone to the materials on BRC27 and pulled, saved, and printed important catalogs & abstracts.  I looked at everything and I've got a file going where I am trying to make sense of it all.  I have not found where anyone has used any Spitzer data.
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Checking references on BRC27; printed important catalogs & abstracts.  I keep looking, but have not found where anyone has used any Spitzer data.
 
   
 
   
Tables for Bica and Chauhan would not open for me. Ogura's full article was having trouble loading.
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*Tables for Bica and Chauhan would not open for me.  
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1974A&A....37..229C -- A study of stellar association Canis Majoris OB 1. -- CLARIA J.J.  no abstract available. Short article, but a nice discussion of the association.  Good study; probably a launch point for other studies.
1974A&A....37..229C -- A study of stellar association Canis Majoris OB 1. -- CLARIA J.J.  no abstract available. Short article, but a nice discussion of the association.  Good study; probably a launch point for other studies.
 
 
   
 
   
 
1974AJ.....79.1022C -- Investigation of a Milky Way region in Canis Majoris. -- CLARIA J.J.  Photoelectric measurements in the standard UB V system (and other mearsuement systems) are presented for 247 stars,
 
1974AJ.....79.1022C -- Investigation of a Milky Way region in Canis Majoris. -- CLARIA J.J.  Photoelectric measurements in the standard UB V system (and other mearsuement systems) are presented for 247 stars,
Line 129: Line 128:
 
   
 
   
 
"abstract: Bright-rimmed clouds (BRCs) found in H II regions are probably sites of triggered star formation due to compression by ionization/shock fronts. Many BRCs harbor IRAS point sources of low dust temperature. .. We have detected a large number (460) of Hα emission stars down to a limiting magnitude of about R=20 in and around all but two of the 28 BRCs observed."  
 
"abstract: Bright-rimmed clouds (BRCs) found in H II regions are probably sites of triggered star formation due to compression by ionization/shock fronts. Many BRCs harbor IRAS point sources of low dust temperature. .. We have detected a large number (460) of Hα emission stars down to a limiting magnitude of about R=20 in and around all but two of the 28 BRCs observed."  
 
The server choked while trying to pull this one up.  (will try again later)
 
 
   
 
   
 
2003A&A...397..177B -- A Catalogue of infrared star clusters and stellar groups. -- BICA E., DUTRA C.M. and BARBUY B.  
 
2003A&A...397..177B -- A Catalogue of infrared star clusters and stellar groups. -- BICA E., DUTRA C.M. and BARBUY B.  
Abstract:  "We compiled a catalogue of infrared star clusters in the Galaxy, which are most of them embedded. It condenses the growing literature information. We also include in the sample infrared stellar groups which are less dense than star clusters...A total of 189 infrared clusters and 87 embedded stellar groups are included. A fraction of 25% of the embedded clusters are projected close to each other in pair or triplet systems, indicating that multiplicity plays an important role in star cluster formation. Tables 1 and 2 are only available in electronic form at the CDS via anonymous ftp to cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr (130.79.128.5) or via http://cdsweb.u-strasbg.fr/cgi-bin/qcat?J/A+A/397/177
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Abstract:  "Condenses the growing literature information, also included infrared stellar groups...A total of 189 infrared clusters and 87 embedded stellar groups are included. A fraction of 25% of the embedded clusters are projected close to each other in pair or triplet systems, indicating that multiplicity plays an important role in star cluster formation. Tables 1 and 2 are only available in electronic form at the CDS via anonymous ftp to cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr (130.79.128.5) or via http://cdsweb.u-strasbg.fr/cgi-bin/qcat?J/A+A/397/177
 
   
 
   
 
http://www.aanda.org/index.php?option=com_article&access=bibcode&Itemid=129&bibcode=2003A%2526A...397..177BFUL
 
http://www.aanda.org/index.php?option=com_article&access=bibcode&Itemid=129&bibcode=2003A%2526A...397..177BFUL
 
   
 
   
A table of 276 objects was referenced, but would not open for me.  cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr (130.79.128.5)
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A '''table''' of 276 objects was referenced, but would not open for me.  cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr (130.79.128.5)
2009A&A...506..711G -- Star formation history of Canis Major R1. I. Wide-field X-ray study of the young stellar population. -- GREGORIO-HETEM J., MONTMERLE T., RODRIGUES C.V., MARCIOTTO E., PREIBISCH T. and ZINNECKER H.  
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2009A&A...506..711G Star formation history of Canis Major R1. I. Wide-field X-ray study of the young stellar population. -- GREGORIO-HETEM J., MONTMERLE T., RODRIGUES C.V., MARCIOTTO E., PREIBISCH T. and ZINNECKER H.  
 
http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/arxiv/pdf/0909/0909.2888v1.pdf    (have read, will print)
 
http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/arxiv/pdf/0909/0909.2888v1.pdf    (have read, will print)
 
   
 
   
 
used data from ROSAT/PSPC, XMM-Newton, and Chandra plus Gemini observations. Lots of B stars in this field.  Four objects show a real H-K excess, indicating circumstellar matter.  Seems like they have studied the daylights out of this area, but not in Spitzer wavelengths.
 
used data from ROSAT/PSPC, XMM-Newton, and Chandra plus Gemini observations. Lots of B stars in this field.  Four objects show a real H-K excess, indicating circumstellar matter.  Seems like they have studied the daylights out of this area, but not in Spitzer wavelengths.
 
   
 
   
2009 MNRAS 396, 964.  
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2009 MNRAS 396, 964. Triggered star formation and evolution of T-Tauri stars in and around bright-rimmed clouds authors: Chauhan, Neelam, et al.
“Triggered star formation and evolution of T-Tauri stars in and around bright-rimmed clouds” authors: Chauhan, Neelam, et al.
 
 
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2009MNRAS.396..964C
 
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2009MNRAS.396..964C
 
   
 
   
MNRAS won’t let me in.  Can’t find any way in through ADS; title does sound promising, just can’t get to it.
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*MNRAS won’t let me in.  Can’t find any way in through ADS; title does sound promising, just can’t get to it.
 
   
 
   
 
In checking references, Lada seems to come up a good bit.  While old, this one looked particularly relevant:
 
In checking references, Lada seems to come up a good bit.  While old, this one looked particularly relevant:
 
Lada, C. J., & Adams, F. 1992, ApJ, 393, 278  
 
Lada, C. J., & Adams, F. 1992, ApJ, 393, 278  
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--[[User:Sartore|Sartore]] 11:12, 16 February 2011 (PST)
 +
 +
--[[User:Legassie|Legassie]] 11:30, 16 February 2011 (PST)
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 +
I took  an action item from our last telecon to double-check Luisa's findings for BRC 27.  I only found ONE item that might be worth taking a lot but was not found by others.  It was number 7 of 73 SIMBAD objects returned (RAFGL 5220).  There were 8 references, one of which I thought looked interesting:
 +
 +
2004ApJS..152..201G - Astrophys. J., Suppl. Ser., 152, 201-209 (2004) - 01.06.04 24.11.06 June 2004
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 +
'''Automated classification of 2000 bright IRAS sources.'''
 +
 +
GUPTA R.; SINGH H.P.; VOLK K.; KWOK S.
  
-Sartore
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Abstract (from CDS): An artificial neural network (ANN) scheme has been employed that uses a supervised back-propagation algorithm to classify 2000 bright sources from the Calgary database of Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS) spectra in the region 8-23 µm. The database has been classified into 17 predefined classes based on the spectral morphology. We have been able to classify over 80% of the sources correctly in the first instance. The speed and robustness of the scheme will allow us to classify the whole of the Low Resolution Spectrometer database, containing more than 50,000 sources, in the near future.
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Abstract Copyright: American Astronomical Society 2004

Latest revision as of 22:36, 16 February 2011

brc27 07h04m07.8s -11d16m43s

  • Chauhan observed BR 27 and came up with some YSO candidates and a catalog(?) entry on SIMBAD.
  • through Google Scholar ...

Ogura. "Triggered Star Formation associated with HII Regions." [1]. ASI Conference Series. 2010, Vol. 1, pp 19–25.


Ogura, Sugitani and Pickles. "H-alpha Emission Stars and Herbig-Haro Objects in the Vicinity of Bright-Rimmed Clouds." [2] AJ. 123: 2597-2626, 2002 May.


Morgan, et al. "A Radio and Mid-Infrared Survey of Northern Bright-Rimmed Clouds." [3] astro-ph 0407167v1.


Soares and Bica. "The Embedded Star Clusters in the Nebulae NGC 2327 and BRC 27 in Canis Majoris R1." [4] A&A. 388, 172{178 (2002).


  • ADS: Chauhan; Simbad: 14 entries (I checked them, not all seem to be on this exact area)

Images: the Aladdin Sky Atlas (DSS2 & Simbad) shows the image fairly bright where the B & W is dark. Kicking in the IRAS data only makes 5 IR targets show up, plus the cloud near the bottom of the image.

Where are all the targets & YSOs that are mentioned by Chauhan? Chauhan abstract (2009) “Triggered star formation and evolution of T-Tauri stars in and around bright-rimmed clouds.” From Chauhan’s data tables 4 & 6 I gleaned the following nuggets of information: table4.dat 85 133 Dereddened magnitude, colors, age and mass of the YSOs associated with the BRCs; Last entry from table 4 and Table 6 each say this: Cl II YSO class (meta.code.class) (CLASS_CODE)

Coordinates for this cloud come up as: 07 03 58.7 -11 23 19 IRAS 07016-1118 slightly south and to the right of the main image of BRC27

From data Table 6: IRAC photometric magnitudes of the disk bearing candidates in BRCs 2, 27 and 13/14 (are we interested in examining this?)

--CJohnson 16:39, 9 February 2011 (PST)

  • (Rebull 19:21, 9 February 2011 (PST)) OK, just for comparison, here is a walkthrough of what luisa would do, but for just one of the objects.

from above -- brc27 07h04m07.8s -11d16m43s. search in SIMBAD, by position, for objects within 10 arcmin. 73 objects returned. Some emission stars (EM*LkHa 221 means emission star, from the Lick Halpha survey -- a young star!), a star cluster, some IRAS sources (possibly but not necessarily young stars), a Lynds Dark Nebula (cloud dark in the optical), sources whose name suggests affiliation with BRC27 ("OSP2002 BRC27 xx" sources), x-ray sources (RXJ sources), and several things SIMBAD flags as just emission stars ("Em*", e.g. likely young stars). Clicking on any of the names leads me to an information page tied to that object.

The x-ray source 1RXS J070409.5-111707 is closest to the position i asked for. no literature refs on that. Next closest is EM* LkHA 221. There are four synonyms for this one, and 8 references.

2004PASJ...56..313K -- 13^CO (J = 1-0) survey toward of molecular clouds toward the Monoceros and Canis Major Region. -- KIM B.G., KAWAMURA A., YONEKURA Y. and FUKUI Y. there are data tables, but this is a radio survey. unlikely to have much information on the point sources.
2003A&A...399..141M -- Merged catalogue of reflection nebulae. -- MAGAKIAN T.Y. hm. catalog of nebulae? probably not much information on the pt srcs, but worth tracking down.
2002A&A...388..172S -- The embedded star clusters in the nebulae NGC 2327 and BRC 27 in Canis Majoris R1. -- SOARES J.B. and BICA E. [1] this one actually uses the term "BRC 27" in the title and talks about stars. definitely look at this one.
1999MNRAS.310..175T -- The Cepheid distance to M96 and the Hubble constant. -- TANVIR N.R., FERGUSON H.C. and SHANKS T. cepheids and the hubble constant?? unlikely to have much to do with the thing we care about. why is this crosslisted? might look it up just to solve that mystery.
1992ApJS...78..239W -- A catalog of co-added IRAS fluxes or Orion population stars. -- WEAVER W.B. and JONES G. [2] Hm. reanalysis of IRAS data. and Orion population means young. look this one up.
1990ApJS...74..575W -- A catalog of pre-main-sequence emission-line stars with IRAS source associations. -- WEINTRAUB D.A. [3] DING DING DING. likely to summarize lots of young stars here. this is likely to be the first one i go grab.
1988LicOB1111....1H -- Third catalog of emission-line stars of the Orion population. -- HERBIG G.H. and BELL K.R. this is just a catalog. worth looking up to see what is known (or was known in 1988) about stars in this region.
1986PASJ...38..395W -- Emission-line stars in the Canis Major star-formation region. -- WIRAMIHARDJA S.D., KOGURE T., NAKANO M. and YOSHIDA S. [4] another DING DING DING. likely to summarize lots of young stars here.

Next closest object is [C74] 81. 3 references.

1999MNRAS.310..210S -- The stellar composition of the star formation region CMa R1 - I. Results from new photometric and spectroscopic classifications. -- SHEVCHENKO V.S., EZHKOVA O.V., IBRAHIMOV M.A., VAN DEN ANCKER M.E. and TJIN A DJIE H.R.E. [5] this one is worth grabbing too. stellar composition of the SFR also suggests list of objects.
1974A&A....37..229C -- A study of stellar association Canis Majoris OB 1. -- CLARIA J.J. pretty old. probably not worth grabbing? check abs.
1974AJ.....79.1022C -- Investigation of a Milky Way region in Canis Majoris. -- CLARIA J.J. Also old. check abs.

Next closest object is NGC 2327, a cluster. three references.

2009A&A...506..711G -- Star formation history of Canis Major R1. I. Wide-field X-ray study of the young stellar population. -- GREGORIO-HETEM J., MONTMERLE T., RODRIGUES C.V., MARCIOTTO E., PREIBISCH T. and ZINNECKER H. [6] X-rays can indicate youth (see my Finding cluster members page), and "young stars." get this one.
2003A&A...397..177B -- A Catalogue of infrared star clusters and stellar groups. -- BICA E., DUTRA C.M. and BARBUY B. [7] another promising one.
2002A&A...388..172S -- The embedded star clusters in the nebulae NGC 2327 and BRC 27 in Canis Majoris R1. -- SOARES J.B. and BICA E. already found above!

Next closest object is HRW 16 -- one reference to an early-type emission star paper. possibly worth tracking down, unlikely to be terribly fruitful.

Then the next shows you the fallibility of SIMBAD -- NGC 2327 appears listed again, with a different name (and possibly different references!)...

I scrolled down to the first "[OSP2002] BRC 27 23" reference. That resolves to 2002AJ....123.2597O -- H{alpha} emission stars and Herbig-Haro objects in the vicinity of bright-rimmed clouds. -- OGURA K., SUGITANI K. and PICKLES A. This is also likely to be a very good paper to examine, including getting the data tables!

I ignored the rest of the list, on the assumption for now that I've probably found most of the significant results. If, however, you ask SIMBAD to plot the sources up, the position I asked for is relatively deficient of sources; there are a bunch more sources to the south. My guess is that the position as given is a little off from what it really should be. It will be worth doing a more exhaustive SIMBAD search once we pick a target and have a better fix on exactly what regions are covered by the Spitzer obs.

I went to ADS next and searched with "BRC 27" (in quotes) in the abstract field. The first hit is the Soares and Bica paper above. The rest are spurious hits from arXiv. Go back to the ADS search page, and turn off arXiv searching, leaving just "astronomy" checked. Search again. The second hit (2010 ApJ 717 658) has no "BRC 27" that actually appears in the abstract. The 3rd is a astrobio article. the 4th is a chandra prop (no content there). the 5th is Chauhan et al., 2009 MNRAS 396, 964. Title sounds promising. Abstract sounds promising. Put this on the list to retrieve and read. After that, there are radio papers, proposals, AAS posters... and the quality of the relevance goes down. Quit this for now and look at the papers I've got so far.


Checking references on BRC27; printed important catalogs & abstracts. I keep looking, but have not found where anyone has used any Spitzer data.

  • Tables for Bica and Chauhan would not open for me.

1974A&A....37..229C -- A study of stellar association Canis Majoris OB 1. -- CLARIA J.J. no abstract available. Short article, but a nice discussion of the association. Good study; probably a launch point for other studies.

1974AJ.....79.1022C -- Investigation of a Milky Way region in Canis Majoris. -- CLARIA J.J. Photoelectric measurements in the standard UB V system (and other mearsuement systems) are presented for 247 stars,

1986PASJ...38..395W -- Emission-line stars in the Canis Major star-formation region. -- WIRAMIHARDJA S.D., KOGURE T., NAKANO M. and YOSHIDA S. Pages 414-430 are catalog pages, and I'll print them out to look at.

Comprehensive analysis of region by star type. 179 emission-line stars with provisional classifications and color analysis

1990ApJS...74..575W -- A catalog of pre-main-sequence emission-line stars with IRAS source associations. -- D.A.Weintraub The Weintraub article has 11 pages of "pre-main-sequence stars with IRAS Source Associations". Actually, it's 22 panels because there are 2 panels per page and they are rotated sideways. I could not read them without saving them & rotating 90 degrees, so I printed them out to read them well.

1992ApJS...78..239W A catalog of co-added IRAS fluxes of Orion population stars Weaver, Wm. B.; Jones, Gordon

improved flux for prev. sources: IR:stars, emission-line, Be—stars pre-main-sequence HBC 3, 184, 512 & 238 @ 12 m , HBC 488 at 100 m, HBC 168 & 188 at 60 m Catalog on final page (saved to print later)

1999MNRAS.310..210S -- The stellar composition of the star formation region CMa R1 - I. Results from new photometric and spectroscopic classifications. -- SHEVCHENKO V.S., EZHKOVA O.V., IBRAHIMOV M.A., VAN DEN ANCKER M.E. and TJIN A DJIE H.R.E. this one has a list of 165 objects and a large labeled image.

2002A&A...388..172S -- The embedded star clusters in the nebulae NGC 2327 and BRC 27 in Canis Majoris R1. -- SOARES J.B. and BICA E. (5 images from 1951-1998) 2002AJ....123.2597O -- H{alpha} emission stars and Herbig-Haro objects in the vicinity of bright-rimmed clouds. -- OGURA K., SUGITANI K. and PICKLES A.

"abstract: Bright-rimmed clouds (BRCs) found in H II regions are probably sites of triggered star formation due to compression by ionization/shock fronts. Many BRCs harbor IRAS point sources of low dust temperature. .. We have detected a large number (460) of Hα emission stars down to a limiting magnitude of about R=20 in and around all but two of the 28 BRCs observed."

2003A&A...397..177B -- A Catalogue of infrared star clusters and stellar groups. -- BICA E., DUTRA C.M. and BARBUY B. Abstract: "Condenses the growing literature information, also included infrared stellar groups...A total of 189 infrared clusters and 87 embedded stellar groups are included. A fraction of 25% of the embedded clusters are projected close to each other in pair or triplet systems, indicating that multiplicity plays an important role in star cluster formation. Tables 1 and 2 are only available in electronic form at the CDS via anonymous ftp to cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr (130.79.128.5) or via http://cdsweb.u-strasbg.fr/cgi-bin/qcat?J/A+A/397/177

http://www.aanda.org/index.php?option=com_article&access=bibcode&Itemid=129&bibcode=2003A%2526A...397..177BFUL

A table of 276 objects was referenced, but would not open for me. cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr (130.79.128.5) 2009A&A...506..711G Star formation history of Canis Major R1. I. Wide-field X-ray study of the young stellar population. -- GREGORIO-HETEM J., MONTMERLE T., RODRIGUES C.V., MARCIOTTO E., PREIBISCH T. and ZINNECKER H. http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/arxiv/pdf/0909/0909.2888v1.pdf (have read, will print)

used data from ROSAT/PSPC, XMM-Newton, and Chandra plus Gemini observations. Lots of B stars in this field. Four objects show a real H-K excess, indicating circumstellar matter. Seems like they have studied the daylights out of this area, but not in Spitzer wavelengths.

2009 MNRAS 396, 964. Triggered star formation and evolution of T-Tauri stars in and around bright-rimmed clouds authors: Chauhan, Neelam, et al. http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2009MNRAS.396..964C

  • MNRAS won’t let me in. Can’t find any way in through ADS; title does sound promising, just can’t get to it.

In checking references, Lada seems to come up a good bit. While old, this one looked particularly relevant: Lada, C. J., & Adams, F. 1992, ApJ, 393, 278 --Sartore 11:12, 16 February 2011 (PST)

--Legassie 11:30, 16 February 2011 (PST)

I took an action item from our last telecon to double-check Luisa's findings for BRC 27. I only found ONE item that might be worth taking a lot but was not found by others. It was number 7 of 73 SIMBAD objects returned (RAFGL 5220). There were 8 references, one of which I thought looked interesting:

2004ApJS..152..201G - Astrophys. J., Suppl. Ser., 152, 201-209 (2004) - 01.06.04 24.11.06 June 2004

Automated classification of 2000 bright IRAS sources.

GUPTA R.; SINGH H.P.; VOLK K.; KWOK S.

Abstract (from CDS): An artificial neural network (ANN) scheme has been employed that uses a supervised back-propagation algorithm to classify 2000 bright sources from the Calgary database of Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS) spectra in the region 8-23 µm. The database has been classified into 17 predefined classes based on the spectral morphology. We have been able to classify over 80% of the sources correctly in the first instance. The speed and robustness of the scheme will allow us to classify the whole of the Low Resolution Spectrometer database, containing more than 50,000 sources, in the near future. Abstract Copyright: American Astronomical Society 2004