Light and lighting - Measurement and presentation of photometric data of lamps and luminaires

2021 ◽  
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
Vol 503 (4) ◽  
pp. 5274-5290
Author(s):  
A K Sen ◽  
V B Il’in ◽  
M S Prokopjeva ◽  
R Gupta

ABSTRACT We present the results of our BVR-band photometric and R-band polarimetric observations of ∼40 stars in the periphery of the dark cloud CB54. From different photometric data, we estimate E(B − V) and E(J − H). After involving data from other sources, we discuss the extinction variations towards CB54. We reveal two main dust layers: a foreground, E(B − V) ≈ 0.1 mag, at ∼200 pc and an extended layer, $E(B-V) \gtrsim 0.3$ mag, at ∼1.5 kpc. CB54 belongs to the latter. Based on these results, we consider the reason for the random polarization map that we have observed for CB54. We find that the foreground is characterized by low polarization ($P \lesssim 0.5$ per cent) and a magnetic field parallel to the Galactic plane. The extended layer shows high polarization (P up to 5–7 per cent). We suggest that the field in this layer is nearly perpendicular to the Galactic plane and both layers are essentially inhomogeneous. This allows us to explain the randomness of polarization vectors around CB54 generally. The data – primarily observed by us in this work for CB54, by A. K. Sen and colleagues in previous works for three dark clouds CB3, CB25 and CB39, and by other authors for a region including the B1 cloud – are analysed to explore any correlation between polarization, the near-infrared, E(J − H), and optical, E(B − V), excesses, and the distance to the background stars. If polarization and extinction are caused by the same set of dust particles, we should expect good correlations. However, we find that, for all the clouds, the correlations are not strong.


1998 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 379-379
Author(s):  
P.L. Cottrell ◽  
L. Skuljan ◽  
P.M. Kilmartin ◽  
C. Gilmore ◽  
W.A. Lawson

For more than a decade we have been able to acquire and analyse a significant amount of photometric data of the highly variable R Coronae Borealis (RCB) stars. This has made been possible by a photometric service observing programme instigated at the Observatory. These photometric data have been combined with less extensive spectroscopic coverage, particularly of the decline phase of these stars. These have been supplemented by observations obtained at Mount Stromlo and Siding Spring Observatories for a radial velocity study. Significantly more spectroscopic observations are now being acquired with the development of a new medium resolution spectrograph at Mount John University Observatory. In this poster we will present recent photometric and spectroscopic results for a number of the RCB stars in our sample. This observational and analysis work can be used to provide further insight into the nature of these stars, their likely progeny and progenitors and the processes that are involved in the formation and evolution of the obscuring dust clouds which cause the decline phase.


2000 ◽  
Vol 176 ◽  
pp. 135-136
Author(s):  
Toshiki Aikawa

AbstractSome pulsating post-AGB stars have been observed with an Automatic Photometry Telescope (APT) and a considerable amount of precise photometric data has been accumulated for these stars. The datasets, however, are still sparse, and this is a problem for applying nonlinear time series: for instance, modeling of attractors by the artificial neural networks (NN) to the datasets. We propose the optimization of data interpolations with the genetic algorithm (GA) and the hybrid system combined with NN. We apply this system to the Mackey–Glass equation, and attempt an analysis of the photometric data of post-AGB variables.


Author(s):  
D. Ozuyar ◽  
S. Caliskan ◽  
I. R. Stevens ◽  
A. Elmasli

AbstractThe purpose of this paper is to determine the origin of the photometric variations of 48 Lib using the data from theSTEREOand to investigate their relations with the disk structure. The photometric data comprise a period of five years from 2007 to 2011. The spectroscopic data covering the same time interval are provided from theBeSSdatabase. The Hαlines are examined by measuring their equivalent widths and line intensities. Hαvariations are then compared with those displayed by the photometric data. From the photometry, high-precision results (10−5c d−1in frequency and 10−4mag in amplitude) are obtained. It is detected that the star has shown 24 frequencies, mainly clustered around the peaks at 2.48896(1) and 5.08150(2) c d−1. The analysis reveals that the photometric frequencies are not due to pulsation, but caused by the rotation, and that the remaining frequencies arise from transient activities on or just above the photosphere. Also, it is shown that the spectroscopic data exhibit a significant Hαvariability, and that the Hαline variation depends on the variation of frequency and amplitude, something which has been often proposed in the literature but has never before been demonstrated observationally. This proves that the disk structure and photometric variations are related.


2015 ◽  
Vol 580 ◽  
pp. A47 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Vilella-Rojo ◽  
K. Viironen ◽  
C. López-Sanjuan ◽  
A. J. Cenarro ◽  
J. Varela ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

1999 ◽  
Vol 171 ◽  
pp. 154-156
Author(s):  
T. Bremnes ◽  
B. Binggeli ◽  
P. Prugniel

AbstractWe present preliminary results from two observing campaigns where global photometric data for most dwarf galaxies in the M81 and M101 groups as well as some field dwarfs were obtained. The galaxies in the denser M81 group are more often of dwarf elliptical type and are redder and fainter than those of the M101 group and surrounding field, which are mostly of the dwarf irregular types. But both types follow the same total magnitude - central surface brightness relation, so there might be an evolutionary connection between the two classes.


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