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Interim Report on the Texas Survey

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 August 2015

James N. Douglas
Affiliation:
University of Texas Radio Astronomy Observatory, Department of Astronomy, The University of Texas at Austin
Frank N. Bash
Affiliation:
University of Texas Radio Astronomy Observatory, Department of Astronomy, The University of Texas at Austin

Extract

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The University of Texas Radio Astronomy Observatory (UTRAO) is engaged in a survey of the entire sky north of −35° declination at various frequencies in the range 335-380 MHz. Primary goals are (i) determination of accurate (∼1″) positions for about 50,000 sources, followed by (ii) optical identification of the sources on the basis of exact radio-optical position coincidence; (iii) provision of rough structure models for all listed sources; and (iv) monitor the sky for variable sources on the time scale of 1 to 2 years. The survey is not expected to be a reliable source of absolute flux density information except for those sources known to be unresolved from other work.

Type
I. Surveys of Radio Sources, Source Counts and Anisotropies
Copyright
Copyright © Reidel 1977 

References

Douglas, J.N., Bash, F.N., Ghigo, F.D., Moseley, G.F., and Torrence, G.W.: 1973, Astron.J., 78, 117.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ghigo, F.D.: 1976, ‘Identification of Radio Sources Using Accurate Radio and Optical Positions’, ().Google Scholar
Sutton, J.M., Davies, I.M., Little, A.G., and Murdoch, H.S.: 1974, ‘The Molonglo Radio Source Catalogues 2 and 3’, publication of the School of Physics, University of Sydney.Google Scholar