- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/V/107
- Title:
- MSX5C Infrared Point Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- V/107
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The principal objective of the astronomy experiments abroad the Midcourse Space Experiment (MSX) was to complete the census of the mid-infrared (4.2-25{mu}m) sky: the areas missed by the IRAS mission (about 4% of the sky was not surveyed by IRAS), and the Galactic Plane where the sensitivity of IRAS was degraded by confusion noise in the regions of high source densities or structured extended emission. The infrared instrument on MSX is named SPIRIT III; it is a 35cm clear aperture off-axis telescope with five line scanned infrared focal plane arrays of 18.3arcsec square pixels, with a high sensitivity (0.1Jy at 8.3{mu}m). The characteristics of the 6 bands B1, B2, A, C, D and E are summarized in the "Note (1)" below. The data are contained in 7 files according to the location on the sky: 5 are related to the Galactic Plane, one (non-plane) contains the IRAS gap catalog, the the lmc.dat file contains the observations of the Large Magellanic Cloud.
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- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/V/114
- Title:
- MSX6C Infrared Point Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- V/114
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- Version 2.3 of the Midcourse Space Experiment (MSX) Point Source Catalog (PSC), which supersedes the version (1.2) that was released in 1999 (Cat. V/107), contains over 100,000 more sources than the previous version. The photometry is based on co-added image plates, as opposed to single-scan data, which results in improved sensitivity and hence reliability in the fluxes. Comparison with Tycho-2 positions indicates that the astrometric accuracy of the new catalog is more than 1'' better than that in Version 1.2. In addition to the Galactic plane, Areas Missed by the Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS), and the Large Magellanic Cloud, which were included in the previous catalog, Version 2.3 includes data from the Small Magellanic Cloud, eight nearby galaxies, and several molecular clouds and star forming regions. The infrared instrument on MSX was named SPIRIT III; it was a 35cm clear aperture off-axis telescope with five line scanned infrared focal plane arrays of 18.3arcsec square pixels, with a high sensitivity (0.1Jy at 8.3micron). The 6 bands are B1 (4.29micron, FWHM 4.22-4.36micron), B2 (4.25micron, 4.24-4.45micron), A (8.28micron, 6.8-10.8micron), C (12.13micron, 11.1-13.2micron), D (14.65micron, 13.5-15.9micron), and E (21.34micron, 18.2-25.1micron). The MSX catalog names of the sources have been defined according to International Astronomical Union (IAU) conventions with a unique identifier combined with the position of the source. In this case, the MSX PSC V2.3 sources are named using the convention MSX6C GLLL.llll+/-BB.bbbb, where MSX6C denotes that this is MSX data run using Version 6.0 of the CONVERT software, and GLLL.llll+/-BB.bbbb gives the Galactic coordinates of the source. (Names in the minicatalogs may differ slightly from those given in Kraemer et al. 2002AJ....124.2990K, 2003AJ....126.1423K) For ease of handling, the main catalog is broken into six files: five for the Galactic plane survey, plus the primary high latitude regions (the IRAS gaps and the LMC). The supplementary catalogs are the singleton catalog, the low-reliability catalog, and minicatalogs for 19 selected regions. All catalogs have the same format. However, the minicatalogs for the galaxies (except the SMC) and Orion do not have all the fields filled in because they were solely created from the images, not from the Point Source Extractor; there are no singleton files for these regions. Also, the minicatalogs may not have singleton or low-reliability counterparts if no sources met the inclusion criteria. All told, there are a total of 45 data files.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/II/269
- Title:
- MSX Ultraviolet Point Source Catalog
- Short Name:
- II/269
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The Midcourse Space Experiment (MSX) Ultraviolet Point Source Catalog contains 47,283 point sources from a set of 201 observations that surveyed approximately half the sky and from a set of 32 pointed observations toward specific targets. For each source, we provide position, UV magnitude and uncertainty in at least one of six filters and where possible an identification of a nearby source from the SIMBAD database. If a nearby source is identified, we include its proximity to the MSX source, and if known, the spectral type and the B and V magnitudes of the SIMBAD object. There were 11,565 matches between MSX and SIMBAD objects, and we estimate false identification to be about 3%. The limiting fluxes differ from filter to filter, and range from 10^-16^erg/s/cm2/{AA} for IUN4 to 7.8*10^-12^erg/s/cm2/{AA} for IUW3. Because of variations among the observation sets, the catalog is not complete to the limiting magnitudes for the filters. The UV instrument on MSX was named UVISI (Mill et al., 1994, Journal of Spacecraft and Rockets, 31, 900 (1994JSpRo..31..900M in ADS); Carbary et al., 1994, Applied Optics, 33, 4201 (1994ApOpt..33.4201C in ADS)). The fields-of-view for the narrow-field and wide-field UV imagers were 1.46x1.19deg (detector pixels of 20.6"x17.5") and 13.4x9.2deg (detector pixels of 3.12'x2.27'), respectively. Four filters were used with the narrow-field imager (IUN) with effective wavelengths centered at 2480{AA} (IUN3), 2310{AA} (IUN4), 2230{AA} (IUN5), and 2930{AA} (IUN6). Two filters were used with the wide-field imager (IUW) and centered at 1320{AA} (IUW3) and 1560{AA} (IUW6). Two data files are available for the MSX UV Point Source Catalog: the calibration data file and the catalog data file.