GCVSEGSN - General Catalog of Variable Stars (GCVS4.2): Extragalactic Supernovae |
HEASARC Archive |
The present improved electronic version of the GCVS 4th Edition, Volumes I-V, combined with the Name-Lists of Variable Stars Nos. 67 - 77, is also available from the Sternberg Institute via anonymous ftp to ftp://ftp.sai.msu.su/pub/groups/cluster/gcvs/gcvs and more information is also available on the Web at http://www.sai.msu.su/groups/cluster/gcvs/gcvs .
General Catalogue of Variable Stars, 4rd ed., vol.V. Extragalactic Variable Stars Artiukhina N.M., Durlevich O.V., Frolov M.S., Goranskij V.P., Gorynya N.A., Karitskaya E.A., Kazarovets E.V., Kholopov P.N., Kireeva N.N., Kurochkin N.E., Lipunova N.A., Medvedeva G.I., Pastukhova E.N., Samus N.N., Tsvetkova T.M. <"Kosmosinform", Moscow, (1995)>
Name
The supernova designation, in the standard form, as recommended by the
Dictionary of Astronomical Nomenclature, consisting of the 'SN ' prefix
followed by the year it was discovered, and then (if there were multiple
supernovae in a particular year) either the upper-case letters
'A' through 'Z' (for the first 26 SNe discovered in a given year) or the
lower-case letters 'aa', 'ab', etc. (for the 27th, 28th, etc., SNe discovered
in a given year).
SN_Flag
This is a flag that is set to '?' for doubtful or to '-' for
now-rejected supernovae
Remark_Flag
This is a flag that is set to 'Y' if there is a remark about
the particular supernovae in the file:
https://cdsarc.cds.unistra.fr/ftp/cats/II/250/sn_rem.dat
Galaxy
The designation of the parent galaxy of the supernova in a compact
form:
"N" means NGC catalogue number "I" refers to the IC catalogue "U" to the UGC catalogue "M" to the MCG catalogue "E" to ESO survey lists "An" means an anonymous galaxy "Intergal" is for cases when the supernova cannot be reliably attributed to a particular galaxy and is considered intergalactic
RA
The Right Ascension of the parent galaxy in the specified equinox. This
was given to no better than a precision of 0.1 seconds of time in the
originating table, and in 1950 equatorial co-ordinates. The real coordinate
accuracy (if not 0.1 seconds of time) is specified by the (non-blank) value
of the position_flag parameter. For 7 of the 984 entries in the original
table there was no information in this field: for 6 of these 7 supernovae
(SNe 1956, 1964O, 1966O, 1967, 1972 and 1980I), the HEASARC used for this
value the RA of the supernova itself (the ra_sn parameter), while the
remaining entry (SN 1987G) has been deleted, since it is a duplicate entry
of the supernova SN 1987D according to the original table.
Dec
The Declination of the parent galaxy in the specified equinox. This was
given to a precision of 1 arcsecond in the originating table, and in 1950
equatorial co-ordinates. The real coordinate accuracy (if not 1 arcsecond)
is specified by the (non-blank) value of the position_flag parameter.
For 7 of the 984 entries in the original table there was no information in
this field: for 6 of these 7 supernovae (SNe 1956, 1964O, 1966O, 1967, 1972
and 1980I), the HEASARC used for this value the declination of the supernova
itself (the dec_sn parameter), while the remaining entry (SN 1987G) has been
deleted, since it is a duplicate entry of the supernova SN 1987D according to
the original table.
LII
The Galactic Longitude of the parent galaxy.
BII
The Galactic Latitude of the parent galaxy.
Position_Flag
This is a flag coded to give the real accuracy of the
parent galaxy coordinates (if it is not the default 0.1 seconds of time in
RA and 1 arcsecond in declination) as follows:
'A' means right ascensions accurate to one second of time and declinations accurate to one arcsecond 'B' means declinations accurate to one tenth of an arcminute 'C' means declinations accurate to one arcminute
Morph_Type
The morphological type of the parent galaxy of the supernova.
The form this is given is a little non-standard: e.g., SB-AB presumably
means SBab, S-BC = Sbc, etc. The letters after the hyphen, in other words,
are usually written as lower-case letters in normal usage.
BT_Mag
The integrated B-T magnitude of the parent galaxy of the supernova.
BT_Mag_Flag
This is a flag that is set to ':' if the integrated B-T
magnitude of the parent galaxy is considered to be uncertain.
BT_Mag_Band
The band in which the integrated B-T magnitude of the parent
galaxy was obtained: B, J, or V, or blank for a photographic magnitude.
Max_Epoch
The date of the SN's maximum brightness or of its discovery,
or of an isolated observation at high brightness. If this field contains an
asterisk (*) or the parameter max_mag_obs is set to 'N', it means that the
date and/or the magnitude given refer not to
the maximum (which was not covered with observations), but to the EPOCH OF
DISCOVERY or to an isolated observation at high brightness. As a rule,
information about maxima was not included if it was based on
considerable extrapolation. Thus, combining this information with the year
given in the name designation for the supernova gives the complete
specification: e.g., SN 1935A had a maximum epoch value of Jun 5, so that
the maximum occurred on Jun 5 1935.
Max_Mag
The magnitude at maximum (light) of the supernova.
Max_Mag_Flag
This is a flag that is set to ':' if the magnitude at maximum
(light) of the supernova is considered to be uncertain.
Max_Mag_Band
This is the band in which the maximum magnitude of the
supernova was measured: B, J, V, R, I, K, r, or blank for a photographic
magnitude.
Max_Mag_Obs
This is a flag that is set to 'N' if the maximum of the
supernova was not observed. This means that the date and/or the magnitude
given in the parameters max_epoch and mag_mag refer not to
the maximum (which was not covered with observations), but to the EPOCH OF
DISCOVERY or to an isolated observation at high brightness.
SN_Offset_1
The offset in arcseconds in (presumably) the Right Ascension
direction of the supernova from the parent galaxy nucleus.
SN_Offset_1_Dir
The orientation of the offset in the Right Ascension
direction, where 'E' means eastwards, 'W' means westwards, ':' means
uncertain, and '?' means unknown.
SN_Offset_2
The offset in arcseconds in (presumably) the Declination
direction of the supernova from the parent galaxy nucleus.
SN_Offset_2_Dir
The orientation of the offset in the Declination direction,
where 'N' northwards 'S' means southwards, ':' means uncertain, and '?' means
unknown. Notice that SN 1969 Q has a value of 'E' for this parameter (but
since the value of sn_offset_2 is 0 this presumably is of no real
consequence.
RA_1950_SN
The Right Ascension of the supernova in B1950 coordinates,
when available, as given in the original table.
Dec_1950_SN
The Declination of the supernova in B1950 coordinates,
when available, as given in the original table.
RA_2000_SN
The Right Ascension of the supernova in J2000 coordinates,
when available, as precessed by the HEASARC from the B1950 coordinates
given in the original table.
Dec_2000_SN
The Declination of the supernova in J2000 coordinates,
when available, as precessed by the HEASARC from the B1950 coordinates
given in the original table.
SN_Position_Flag
This is a flag coded to give the real accuracy of the
supernova coordinates (if it is not the default 0.1 seconds of time in
RA and 1 arcsecond in declination) as follows:
'A' means right ascensions accurate to one second of time and declinations accurate to one arcsecond 'B' means declinations accurate to one tenth of an arcminute 'C' means declinations accurate to one arcminute
SN_Type
The supernova type classification: this is limited to the
types I (I-A, I-B) and II (II-l, II-pl), with possible indications of
peculiarities indicated by 'pec'.
Discoverer
The name of the discoverer of the supernova.
In the case of several discoverers, the name of the first author of the
discovery is given followed by "+" symbol. As a rule, information on
independent rediscoveries is not presented in the remarks, for the
sake of brevity. The abbreviation "BASST" in this column means that
the supernova was discovered by the Berkeley Automated Supernova
Search Team.
Ref_Star
A reference code for the primary study of the supernova.
The key to the references is given in the file:
https://cdsarc.cds.unistra.fr/ftp/cats/II/250/refs.dat
Ref_Chart
A reference code for a chart or photograph of the supernova.
The key to the references is given in the file:
https://cdsarc.cds.unistra.fr/ftp/cats/II/250/refs.dat
Class
The browse classification as created by the HEASARC based on the
value of the sn_type parameter.