/ftp/cats/iii/180



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III/180        SS(77) Catalogue: new H-alpha em* in Milky Way (Stephenson+ 1977)
The following files can be converted to FITS (extension .fit .fgz or .fiZ)
	catalog.dat notes.dat
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Query from: http://vizier.cds.unistra.fr/viz-bin/VizieR?-source=III/180
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drwxr-xr-x 259 cats archive 8192 Dec 5 19:00 [Up] drwxr-xr-x 2 cats archive 311 Jan 13 2023 [TAR file] -rw-r--r-- 1 cats archive 476 Dec 19 2022 .message -r--r--r-- 1 cats archive 6012 Jan 1 2003 ReadMe -rw-r--r-- 1 cats archive 448 Nov 12 2012 +footg5.gif -rw-r--r-- 1 cats archive 4137 Nov 12 2012 +footg8.gif -r--r--r-- 1 cats archive 11166 Oct 29 1994 catalog.dat.gz [txt] [txt.gz] [fits] [fits.gz] [html] -r--r--r-- 1 cats archive 3470 Jan 1 2003 notes.dat [txt] [txt.gz] [fits] [fits.gz] [html]
Beginning of ReadMe : III/180 SS(77) Catalogue: new H-alpha em* in Milky Way (Stephenson+ 1977) ================================================================================ New H-alpha Emission Stars in the Milky Way. Stephenson C.B., Sanduleak N. <Astrophys. J. Suppl. Ser. 33, 459 (1977)> =1977ApJS...33..459S ================================================================================ ADC_Keywords: Stars, early-type ; Stars, emission Keywords: stars: early-type - stars: emission-line, Be - stars: spectral classification Abstract: Data on 455 H-alpha emission stars found in all parts of the Milky Way, virtually all previously unpublished, are tabulated, with newly measured coordinates usually accurate to better than 2". A half-dozen stars appear to have been published previously with erroneous coordinates, or to have been published but omitted from the general catalog by Wackerling (1970MmRAS..73..153W). Included among the new stars are known OB stars of the Luminous Stars in the Northern Milky Way survey, from the Hamburg zones, which were originally searched for Halpha emission at slightly lower spectral resolution than we have used. The stars are in general of early spectral type, and are mostly fainter than the limits of the DM catalogs. The objective-prism plates covered the entire Milky Way within about 10deg of the galactic equator, at a spectral dispersion of about 1000AA/mm at H-alpha. Note: This is the catalogue which includes the famous SS 433 object.