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I've been playing around with Red Shift calculations
and this is probably a simple question for anyone experienced in the field, but I'm looking for the best data that gives both the Z shift and distance measured using a method other than the hubble constant. In other words I'm looking for the data that the Hubble constant is calculated from. I'm only looking for light emitting objects not quasars or radio sources. I've looked in Google and a couple of beginning astromomy books which had a couple of charts but not the actual measurements. Also they seem to not give any estimate as to which measurements are the best or most accurate. If someone could please point me to a textbook or the original papers containing the best estimates of stellar or galactic distances together with the corresponding red shift for those objects it'd be a big help to me. Thanks in advance. bjacoby -- SPAM-Guard! Remove .users (if present) to email me! |
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Dear bjacoby:
wrote in message ... I've been playing around with Red Shift calculations and this is probably a simple question for anyone experienced in the field, but I'm looking for the best data that gives both the Z shift and distance measured using a method other than the hubble constant. In other words I'm looking for the data that the Hubble constant is calculated from. I'm only looking for light emitting objects not quasars or radio sources. You might try this: http://www.stellar-database.com/ And there may be stuff linked off the FAQ... David A. Smith |
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\(formerly\)" dlzc1.cox@net wrote:
Thanks! And could you tell me how to access the FAQ for this group? ---------------------------- You might try this: http://www.stellar-database.com/ And there may be stuff linked off the FAQ... David A. Smith -- SPAM-Guard! Remove .users (if present) to email me! |
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... but I'm looking for
the best data that gives both the Z shift and distance measured using a method other than the hubble constant. In other words I'm looking for the data that the Hubble constant is calculated from. I'm only looking for light emitting objects not quasars or radio sources. You can find several references to papers which compare different methods of distance measurement (other than redshift) at the bottom of this lectu http://spiff.rit.edu/classes/phys240...t/distant.html Look for the papers by the HST Key Project Team. These discuss only relatively nearby galaxies, which are so close that their peculiar velocities are a good fraction of their recession velocities. You'll have to do some searching to find good references which deal with galaxies more distant than, say, the Coma cluster (of course, there aren't any really good methods for measuring the distance to such galaxies). I suggest you go to the ADS search page: http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abstract_service.html and type words like "distance measurement galaxy methods" into the box labelled "Abstract Words". Good luck. Michael Richmond |
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Dear
wrote in message ... \(formerly\)" dlzc1.cox@net wrote: Thanks! And could you tell me how to access the FAQ for this group? Dr. Lazio posts a Welcome message every week or so. From it, I find... QUOTE This post is an extract of the material found in the sci.astro FAQ. The FAQ is posted on a regular basis to the newsgroup sci.astro. It is available via anonymous ftp from URL:ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/astronomy/faq/, and it is on the World Wide Web at URL:http://sciastro.astronomy.net/sci.astro.html and URL:http://www.faqs.org/faqs/astronomy/faq/. A partial list of worldwide mirrors (both ftp and Web) is maintained at URL:http://sciastro.astronomy.net/mirrors.html. (As a general note, many other FAQs are also available from URL:ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/.) END QUOTE David A. Smith |
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go to google put in extragalactic articles
go to site |
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wrote:
From: Subject: Newbie Seeks Red Shift data Newsgroups: sci.astro References: Organization: William C. Keel wrote: I wrote: (I haven't made it over to www.stellar-database.com yet) ....snip... And though I hate to be a pest (I warned you I was a newbie) I don't quite understand your "distance modulus". What formula would I use to get the galactic distance in light years? And what formula would I use to get the red shift Z factor out of the velocity? I've seen fairly simple ones to do that but people talk about all kinds of corrections and things. Oops, sorry, I am bad at reading the right level of response from people's posts. DM is what Freedman et al. tabulated, and when I do plots it gets turned into distance internally. By definition, DM is the difference between apparent and absolute magnitudes for something at distance D: DM = 5 log (D/10) for D in parsecs. So 10^(0.2 DM) = D/10 pc and D = 10^(1+.2 DM) in parsecs; multiply by 3.26 for light-years. (It's early, but I think I did the inversion right). The redshift values listed were corrected to the Milky Way mean frame, as best we know it, so you can retrieve z quite accurately as z=v/c for these small values. Bill Keel |
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