Bibcode
Walton, N. A.; Drew, J.; Barlow, M. J.; Corradi, R.; Drake, J.; Gaensicke, B.; Greimel, R.; Groot, P.; Irwin, M. J.; Knigge, C.; Leisy, P.; Lennon, D. J.; Mampaso, A.; Masheder, M.; Morris, R.; Parker, Q. A.; Phillipps, S.; Pretorius, M.; Rodriguez-Gil, P.; Skillen, I.; Sokoloski, J.; Steegs, D.; Unruh, Y.; Witham, A.; Zijlstra, A.; Zurita, A.; IPHAS Collaboration
Bibliographical reference
American Astronomical Society Meeting 205, #113.03; Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society, Vol. 36, p.1541
Advertised on:
12
2004
Citations
1
Refereed citations
1
Description
H-alpha emission both traces diffuse ionised nebulae and is commonly
prominent in the spectra of pre- and post-main-sequence stars and
interacting binaries. Since these are mostly relatively short-lived
phases of evolution, they represent a minority of objects in a mature
galaxy like our own at any one time. In the case of interacting
binaries, they are simply hard to find. This scarcity, in turn, has
acted as a brake on our understanding of these crucial evolutionary
stages that, in youth, help shape the growth of planetary systems, and
in old age, determine stellar end states along with the recycling of
energy and chemically enriched matter back into the galactic
environment.
IPHAS is our H-alpha survey of the Northern Galactic Plane being carried
out with the 2.5-m Isaac Newton telescope's Wide Field Camera. Some
˜1800 deg2 of the northern Galactic plane, over
latitudes 5 < b < 5, is being imaged in H-alpha, r', i' to a depth
of r' ˜20 mag.
Here we report on the first 120 nights of observations. We comment on
the advanced reduction pipeline employed to generate object catalogues.
Early results are noted, including the discovery of a number of new,
hitherto rare, quadropolar planetary nebulae. The IPHAS objects have
been mined to select candidate samples for followup spectroscopic
studies. Extreme emission line objects are selected from the (r' -
H-alpha) v (r' - i') colour-colour plot. First detections of low mass
young stars in the massive OB association Cyg OB2 are presented.
We note how this data set will be a valuable resource for the emerging
Virtual Observatory, and will be especially powerful when compared with
matching multi-colour IR and optical surveys (e.g. 2MASS and SDSS).