Observed if it is visible from southern Arizona. When a new object is announced, I often put it on the SRO program to be Really faint stars with large error in each file. That make it difficult to parse and understand. Of information about magnitudes, errors, number of nights observed, etc. The coordinates are given in decimal degrees, and each line contains lots dat files are not really designed to be used manually. Program that will plot the files from an X-window (my favorite option). If they don't work, weĬan get Bill and Lew to update their programs. Will work with the file versions since about 2005, when I added the (V-Ic)Ĭolor index to the files, but try them and see. The README file also gives you two options for plotting the files, eitherįrom GUIDE or from an excel spreadsheet. Stars might range from a few dozen to thousands, depending on magnitudeĭepth and size of the CCD field of view. To load them into Excel! Even for a single field, the number of (about 500K and 100K stars respectively), so don't try There are also two master files: master_nofs.datĪnd master_sro.dat that include all stars calibrated from each Note that the files are named roughly according to its common name The file:ĭescribes how the data are collected and the format of each file. Observed field for which I have calibrated photometry.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |