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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Estimating distances from parallaxes IV: Distances to 1.33 billion stars in Gaia Data Release 2

TLDR
In this paper, the authors used a weak distance prior that varies smoothly as a function of Galactic longitude and latitude according to a Galaxy model to infer distances to essentially all 1.33 billion stars with parallaxes published in the second Gaia data release.
Abstract
For the vast majority of stars in the second Gaia data release, reliable distances cannot be obtained by inverting the parallax. A correct inference procedure must instead be used to account for the nonlinearity of the transformation and the asymmetry of the resulting probability distribution. Here we infer distances to essentially all 1.33 billion stars with parallaxes published in the second \gaia\ data release. This is done using a weak distance prior that varies smoothly as a function of Galactic longitude and latitude according to a Galaxy model. The irreducible uncertainty in the distance estimate is characterized by the lower and upper bounds of an asymmetric confidence interval. Although more precise distances can be estimated for a subset of the stars using additional data (such as photometry), our goal is to provide purely geometric distance estimates, independent of assumptions about the physical properties of, or interstellar extinction towards, individual stars. We analyse the characteristics of the catalogue and validate it using clusters. The catalogue can be queried on the Gaia archive using ADQL at this http URL and downloaded from this http URL .

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Journal ArticleDOI

Distances to Galactic OB-stars: Photometry vs. Parallax

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compute new spectrophotometric distances to 139 O-stars frequently used as background targets for UV spectroscopy, and compare these distances to values used in previous IUE and FUSE surveys and to parallax distances derived from Gaia-DR2.
Journal ArticleDOI

Search for flares and associated CMEs on late-type main-sequence stars in optical SDSS spectra

TL;DR: In this article, the authors detect and classify stellar flares and potential stellar coronal mass ejection (CME) signatures in optical spectra provided by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) data.
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A massive white-dwarf merger product before final collapse.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reported observations of a hot star with a spectrum dominated by emission lines, which is located at the centre of a circular mid-infrared nebula and concluded that both objects formed recently from the merger of two massive white dwarfs.
Journal ArticleDOI

A sub-Neptune and a non-transiting Neptune-mass companion unveiled by ESPRESSO around the bright late-F dwarf HD 5278 (TOI-130)

Alessandro Sozzetti, +57 more
TL;DR: A. C. Sozzetti, M. R. Benediktsson as discussed by the authors, A. C., J. Molaro, N.Rodriguez, S. Rodríguez, A.C.Rodriquez, R. Rodriguez, S., M. Rodriguez et al.
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Revisiting the Impact of Dust Production from Carbon-Rich Wolf-Rayet Binaries

TL;DR: In this article, a dust spectral energy distribution and binary stellar population analysis revisiting the dust production rates (DPRs) in the winds of carbon-rich Wolf-Rayet (WC) binaries and their impact on galactic dust budgets is presented.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Gaia Data Release 2: Observational Hertzsprung-Russell diagrams

C. Babusiaux, +451 more
TL;DR: In this article, the power of the Gaia DR2 in studying many fine structures of the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram (HRD) was highlighted, depending in particular on stellar population selections.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gaia Early Data Release 3: Summary of the contents and survey properties

TL;DR: Gaia DR2 as mentioned in this paper is the second Gaia data release, consisting of astrometry, photometry, radial velocities, and information on astrophysical parameters and variability, for sources brighter than magnitude 21.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gaia Data Release 2: Catalogue validation

TL;DR: The second Gaia data release (DR2) contains very precise astrometric and photometric properties for more than one billion sources, astrophysical parameters for dozens of millions, radial velocities for millions, variability information for half a million of stellar sources and orbits for thousands of solar system objects as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Estimating Distances from Parallaxes

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate the properties and performance of various prior assumptions and examine their implications, and demonstrate that a simple prior which decreases asymptotically to zero at infinite distance has good performance, accommodates nonpositive parallaxes, and does not require a bias correction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gaia Data Release 2: using Gaia parallaxes

TL;DR: The main recommendation is to always treat the derivation of (astro-)physical parameters from astrometric data, in particular when parallaxes are involved, as an inference problem which should preferably be handled with a full Bayesian approach.
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