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Composite spectra Paper 14: HR 1129, a long-period binary showing evidence of circumbinary material HR 1129 is a 4.8-mag star in the constellation Camelopardus, strangely(in view of its brightness) lacking a constellation designation. It haslong been known to exhibit a composite spectrum consisting of alate-type primary and an early-type secondary. The radial velocity ofthe primary is easily measured, and was announced as variable nearly 100years ago. A preliminary orbit with a period of 6150 d was given for itby one of the present authors in 1990; our new value is 6124 +/- 3 d.The system has been resolved by speckle interferometry, but has not beenmeasured systematically by that technique. The spectrum of the primaryis found to be very similar to that of α Aqr (G2Ib), although theparallax shows HR 1129 to be somewhat less luminous. The secondaryspectrum has been isolated by subtraction and has proved to be that of aB7 star that is somewhat above the main sequence and may itself alreadybe a giant. We present a comprehensive discussion of the spectra of bothstars, and deduce that the system is considerably reddened: E(B - V) ~0.30, AV ~ 0.9 mag. By incorporating 25 measurements of theradial velocity of the secondary, we calculate a double-lined orbitsolution which gives the mass ratio for the components as 1.109 +/-0.022; we determine individual masses of 4.8-5.2 Msolar(primary) and 4.3-4.7 Msolar (secondary). The orbit is viewedat an inclination of ~ 87°, but there are no eclipses. However,around the phases of conjunction the MgII doublet near λ2800Å, as seen in IUE spectra, exhibits evidence of two circumstellarabsorption systems, which we interpret as a wind from the cool giant anda static shell around it. Substantial 100-μm emission recorded byIRAS points to the presence of warm circumbinary dust enveloping thesystem, and is likely to have originated in the stellar wind.
| A catalog of rotational and radial velocities for evolved stars Rotational and radial velocities have been measured for about 2000evolved stars of luminosity classes IV, III, II and Ib covering thespectral region F, G and K. The survey was carried out with the CORAVELspectrometer. The precision for the radial velocities is better than0.30 km s-1, whereas for the rotational velocity measurementsthe uncertainties are typically 1.0 km s-1 for subgiants andgiants and 2.0 km s-1 for class II giants and Ib supergiants.These data will add constraints to studies of the rotational behaviourof evolved stars as well as solid informations concerning the presenceof external rotational brakes, tidal interactions in evolved binarysystems and on the link between rotation, chemical abundance and stellaractivity. In this paper we present the rotational velocity v sin i andthe mean radial velocity for the stars of luminosity classes IV, III andII. Based on observations collected at the Haute--Provence Observatory,Saint--Michel, France and at the European Southern Observatory, LaSilla, Chile. Table \ref{tab5} also available in electronic form at CDSvia anonymous ftp to cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr (130.79.128.5) or viahttp://cdsweb.u-strasbg.fr/Abstract.html
| Open clusters with Hipparcos. I. Mean astrometric parameters New memberships, mean parallaxes and proper motions of all 9 openclusters closer than 300 pc (except the Hyades) and 9rich clusters between 300 and 500 pc have been computed using Hipparcosdata. Precisions, ranging from 0.2 to 0.5 mas for parallaxes and 0.1 to0.5 mas/yr for proper motions, are of great interest for calibratingphotometric parallaxes as well as for kinematical studies. Carefulinvestigations of possible biases have been performed and no evidence ofsignificant systematic errors on the mean cluster parallaxes has beenfound. The distances and proper motions of 32 more distant clusters,which may be used statistically, are also indicated. Based onobservations made with the ESA Hipparcos astrometry satellite
| The Tokyo PMC catalog 90-93: Catalog of positions of 6649 stars observed in 1990 through 1993 with Tokyo photoelectric meridian circle The sixth annual catalog of the Tokyo Photoelectric Meridian Circle(PMC) is presented for 6649 stars which were observed at least two timesin January 1990 through March 1993. The mean positions of the starsobserved are given in the catalog at the corresponding mean epochs ofobservations of individual stars. The coordinates of the catalog arebased on the FK5 system, and referred to the equinox and equator ofJ2000.0. The mean local deviations of the observed positions from theFK5 catalog positions are constructed for the basic FK5 stars to comparewith those of the Tokyo PMC Catalog 89 and preliminary Hipparcos resultsof H30.
| First radial velocities for 146 bright F- and G-type stars We have obtained an average of 5.7 radial velocities for 146 northernstars of types F and G (all luminosity classes) listed in 'A Supplementto the Bright Star Catalogue' as having no previously known radialvelocity measures. Those were obtained with charge coupled devices(CCDs) and a cross-correlation technique; the intrinsic velocityaccuracy, based on stars of apparently constant velocity, is probablyless than +/- 0.3 km/s per mean. Of those stars 14% are newly discoveredSB2 stars. The prevelance of rapid profile variations (in minutes orhours) in most of the broad-lined F-type stars makes it difficult toobtain accurate measures for them.
| Kinematics of Sandage-Fouts stars in three cardinal directions V and (B - V) for 429, 442, and 427 stars are observed in the directionsof the anticenter, Cygnus, and the NGP, respectively, and DDO colors forthose stars G0 and later. The samples observed are ones for whichSandage and Fouts (1987) have published radial velocities. W, V, and Wcomponents of space velocity are derived from DDO distances withavailable proper motions. A clear correlation was found to exist betweenthe velocity dispersions and Fe/H with the dispersions decreasing asFe/H increases to about + 0.00, where V then becomes significantlynegative. The 'thick disk' component is clearly recognized, with sigma(W) approximately equal to 36 km/sec. In the 'old thin disk' and the'young thin disk', 43 percent and 42 percent of the stars have negativeV values, respectively.
| U, V, W velocity components for the old disk using radial velocities of 1295 stars in the three cardinal Galactic directions New radial velocities are presented for 1295 stars chosen at random nearthe three cardinal Galactic directions of l = 180 deg, b = 0; l = 90deg, b = 0 deg; and b = 90 deg, giving the distribution in U, V, and W,respectively, from the radial velocities alone. The measurements weremade with the coude spectrograph of the Mount Wilson 100 in. Hookerreflector. The purpose of the program is to set limits on the densitynormalization in the solar neighborhood of the old thin disk, the oldthick disk, and the halo. Many more high-velocity stars are present inthe unbiased sample than expected from previous estimates of thenormalization. The data suggest the density ratios in the solarneighborhood to be about 90 percent, 10 percent, and about 0.5 percentfor the thin disk, thick disk, and halo populations, respectively.
| E. W. Fick Observatory stellar radial velocity measurements. I - 1976-1984 Stellar radial velocity observations made with the large vacuumhigh-dispersion photoelectric radial velocity spectrometer at FickObservatory are reported. This includes nearly 2000 late-type starsobserved during 585 nights. Gradual modifications to this instrumentover its first eight years of operation have reduced the observationalerror for high-quality dip observations to + or - 0.8 km/s.
| Kinematical data of two samples of late-type stars. Abstract image available at:http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-bib_query?1977A&AS...27..267G&db_key=AST
| Narrow band photometry in the study of stellar populations. I. The sodium D lines in late-type stars Abstract image available at:http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-bib_query?1966MNRAS.134..135P&db_key=AST
| UBV photometry of 550 F, G and K type stars Abstract image available at:http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-bib_query?1966MNRAS.133..475A&db_key=AST
| Hα Photometry of late-type stars I. F, G and K-type stars north of the equator Abstract image available at:http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-bib_query?1964MNRAS.128..435P&db_key=AST
| Photoelectric measurements of the λ4200 A CN band and the G band in G8-K5 spectra Abstract image available at:http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-bib_query?1960MNRAS.120..287G&db_key=AST
| Spectral Classification of Stars Noted on Case Objective-Prism Plates. I Not Available
| A Finding List of F Stars of High Luminosity. Abstract image available at:http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-bib_query?1952ApJ...115..475N&db_key=AST
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Observation and Astrometry data
Constellation: | Κύκνος |
Right ascension: | 21h38m28.77s |
Declination: | +49°47'42.9" |
Apparent magnitude: | 7.03 |
Distance: | 286.533 parsecs |
Proper motion RA: | -7.2 |
Proper motion Dec: | -17.9 |
B-T magnitude: | 8.065 |
V-T magnitude: | 7.116 |
Catalogs and designations:
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