TD1 Catalog of Stellar Ultraviolet Fluxes

In 1978, the TD1 Stellar Ultraviolet Flux Survey cataloged the ultraviolet flux of unreddened stars down to the 10th visual magnitude. The Ultraviolet Sky Survey Telescope on board the TD1 completed this full-sky survey. The star catalog survey was an ESRO project.[1]

Catalog History

The catalog can be found in the published version, Catalogue of stellar ultraviolet fluxes (TD1): A compilation of absolute stellar fluxes measured by the Sky Survey Telescope (S2/68) aboard the ESRO satellite TD-1, by the Science Research Council in 1978[2]

Scientific Impact

Since 1978, there have been 216 citations of this catalog in refereed journals.[3]

gollark: That seems impractical.
gollark: ND Visitor and ND Helper could be separate.
gollark: Yes - do them in Nanuary, Nebuary, Napril, Nay, Nune, Nuly, Naugust, Neptember, Noctober, November and Necember.
gollark: Someone here has a CB gold for a coded new release, which seems a bit more sensible.
gollark: Unless you subcontract to other people to hold gusties until they hit ultra low time, you'll be bottlenecked by that.

References

  1. "TD1 - TD1 Stellar Ultraviolet Fluxes Catalog". Retrieved 5 April 2011.
  2. Thompson, G.I.; Nandy K.; Jamar C.; Monfils C.; Houziaux L.; Carnochan D.J.; Wilson R. (1978). "Catalogue of stellar ultraviolet fluxes (TD1): A compilation of absolute stellar fluxes measured by the Sky Survey Telescope (S2/68) aboard the ESRO satellite TD-1". The Science Research Council.
  3. "Citations history for 1978csuf.book.....T from the ADS Databases". Retrieved 5 April 2011.
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