/ftp/cats/ii/345



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II/345         JMDC : JMMC Measured Stellar Diameters Catalogue   (Duvert, 2016)
The following files can be converted to FITS (extension .fit or fit.gz)
	jmdc.dat
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Query from: http://vizier.cds.unistra.fr/viz-bin/VizieR?-source=II/345
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Beginning of ReadMe : II/345 JMDC : JMMC Measured Stellar Diameters Catalogue (Duvert, 2016) ================================================================================ Compendium of Direct Measurement of Apparent Stellar Diameters. (Initially introduced as part of Chelli et al., 2016A&A...589A.112C). Duvert G. <JMMC center (2016)> =2016yCat.2345....0D ================================================================================ ADC_Keywords: Stars, diameters Keywords: stars: fundamental parameters - techniques: data analysis - techniques: interferometric - astronomical database: miscellaneous - catalogs Abstract: This catalog lists all measurements of stellar apparent diameters made with "direct" techniques: optical interferometry, intensity interferometry and lunar occultations that have been published since the first experiments by Michelson. Description: Several star diameter compilations exist that contain a fair amount of stellar angular diameter measurements. The CADARS (2011, Cat. II/224) has entries for 6888 stars and claims completeness up to 1997. CHARM2 (2005, Cat. J/A+A/431/773) lists 8231 measurements of 3243 stars, up to 2005. However all these catalogs mix results from very direct methods, such as intensity interferometry, with indirect methods, or spectrophotometric estimates of various kind (always including some model of the star), or linear diameters from eclipsing binaries (1600 entries in CADARS), which need some modelling of the two stars, as well as a good estimate of the distance to be converted into an angular diameter. In contrary, the present catalogue, called JMDC (for JMMC Measured stellar Diameters Catalog) is focussed on direct methods only, and selects only one value of the uniform-disk diameter (UDD) and/or limb-darkened diameter (LDD) for each historical measurement. Until 2020, this catalog has been updated manually. Now a web interface has been setup at JMMC (jmdc.jmmc.fr) to submit new measurements and browse the catalog. Please submit your new measurements! The CDS copy will be updated yearly. The current version (Q3 2021) gathers 2013 measurements that have been published since the first experiments by Michelson. Prior to 1997, our bibliography relies only on the reference list of CADARS, carefully reviewed. After this date we used NASA's ADS hosted at CDS. We retained only the measurements obtained from visible/IR interferometry, intensity interferometry and lunar occultation in the database. We always retrieved the values in the original text and used SIMBAD to properly and uniquely identify the stars. The three techniques retained share the same method of converting the measurements (squared visibilities for optical interferometry, correlation of photon-counts for intensity interferometry, fast photometry for lunar occultations) into an angular diameter: fitting a geometrical function into the values, in many cases a uniform disk, which provides a uniform disk diameter (UDD) value. This UDD is wavelength-dependent owing to the limb-darkening effect of the upper layers of a star's photosphere, and JMDC retains the wavelength or photometric band at which the observation was made. To measure a star's apparent diameter consistently, i.e., with the same meaning as our Sun's well-resolved apparent diameter, it was necessary for the authors of these measurements to take into account the star's limb-darkening, for which only theoretical estimates exist as yet. They chose one of the various limb-darkening parameters available in the literature, either by multiplying the UDD by a coefficient function of the wavelength and the star's adopted effective temperature, or directly fitting a limb-darkened disk model in the data. Of course this adds some amount of theoretical bias in the published measurements, which however diminishes as the wavelength increases. An additional difficulty for the lunar occultations is that the result depends on the exact geometry of the occulting portion of the lunar limb, which can, more or less, be correctly estimated. To deal with the limb-darkening problem as efficiently as possible, in the publications where reported diameters are measured in several optical/IR bands, we retain the measurement with the best accuracy and favor the measurement at the longest wavelength to minimize the effect of limb-darkening correction. When the publication include both LDD and UDD values, we report both, and, if available, the conversion coefficient used. We provide in the Notes additional information, such as the eventual binarity of the star, possible erroneous measurements, origin the of limb-darkening factor used, duplication with other publications etc... as weel as more "in-house" comments related to the proper use of this database, initially in the companion publication 2016A&A...589A.112C and now for the maintainance and improvement of the JMMC SearchCal tool. In the paper 2016A&A...589A.112C, we further use the published UDD measurement, or retrieve the original, unpublished UDD measurement from the LDD value and the limb-darkening coefficient used by the authors. We then convert these UDD values into limb-darkened angular diameters using mainly the coefficients from J/A+A/556/A86/table16 and J/A+A/554/A98/table16 when possible (compatible spectral types) and following the prescriptions of the JMMC report JMMC-MEM-2610-001 (http://www.mariotti.fr/doc/approved/JMMC-MEM-2610-0001.pdf) in all other cases. As the limb-darkening coefficients depend on the effective temperature and surface gravity as well as some model of the stellar photosphere, these "revised" LDDs are not part of the present catalog.