Using images from the Spitzer Galactic Legacy Infrared Mid-Plane Survey Extraordinaire (GLIMPSE), we have identified more than 300 extended 4.5 μm sources (Extended Green Objects (EGOs), for the common coding of the [4.5] band as green in three-color composite InfraRed Array Camera images). We present a catalog of these EGOs, including integrated flux density measurements at 3.6, 4.5, 5.8, 8.0, and 24 μm from GLIMPSE and the Multiband Imaging Photometer for Spitzer Galactic Plane Survey. The average angular separation between a source in our sample and the nearest IRAS point source is greater than 1 . The majority of EGOs are associated with infrared dark clouds (IRDCs), and where high-resolution 6.7 GHz CH 3 OH maser surveys overlap the GLIMPSE coverage, EGOs and 6.7 GHz CH 3 OH masers are strongly correlated. Extended 4.5 μm emission is thought to trace shocked molecular gas in protostellar outflows; the association of EGOs with IRDCs and 6.7 GHz CH 3 OH masers suggests that the extended 4.5 μm emission may pinpoint outflows specifically from massive protostars. The mid-IR colors of EGOs lie in regions of color-color space occupied by young protostars still embedded in infalling envelopes.
We present UBVRI photometry of 44 type-Ia supernovae (SN Ia) observed from 1997 to 2001 as part of a continuing monitoring campaign at the Fred Lawrence Whipple Observatory of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. The data set comprises 2190 observations and is the largest homogeneously observed and reduced sample of SN Ia to date, nearly doubling the number of well-observed, nearby SN Ia with published multicolor CCD light curves. The large sample of U-band photometry is a unique addition, with important connections to SN Ia observed at high redshift. The decline rate of SN Ia U-band light curves correlates well with the decline rate in other bands, as does the U −B color at maximum light. However, the U-band peak magnitudes show an increased dispersion relative to other bands even after accounting for extinction and decline rate, amounting to an additional ∼40% intrinsic scatter compared to B-band.Subject headings: supernovae: general -techniques: photometric Data and Reduction DiscoveryOur program of supernova photometry consists solely of follow-up; we search only our email, not the sky, to find new supernovae. A number of observers, both amateur and professional, are engaged in searching for supernovae. We rely on these searches, as well as prompt notification of candidates, coordinated by Dan Green and Brian Marsden of the IAU's Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams (CBAT), with confirmed SN reported in the IAU Circulars. In some cases the SN discoverers provide spectroscopic classification of the new objects, but generally spectroscopy is obtained by others, and reported separately in the IAU Circulars. With our spectroscopic SN follow-up program at the F. L. Whipple Observatory 1.5m telescope and FAST spectrograph (Fabricant et al. 1998), we have classified a large fraction of the new, nearby supernovae reported over the last several years and compiled a large spectroscopic database (Matheson et al. 2005, in preparation).Given a newly discovered and classified supernova, several factors help determine whether or not we include it in our monitoring program. Because of their importance, SN Ia are often given higher priority over other types, but factors such as ease of observability (southern targets and those discovered far to the west are less appealing), supernova phase (objects whose spectra indicate they are after maximum light are given lower priority), redshift (more nearby objects are favored), as well as the number of objects we are already monitoring are significant. Our final sample of well-observed SN Ia is not obtained from a single well-defined set of criteria, and selection effects in both the searches and follow-up may make this sample unsuitable for some applications (such as determining the intrinsic luminosity function of SN Ia, for example). A thorough discussion of the selection biases in the Calán/Tololo supernova search and follow-up campaign can be found in Hamuy & Pinto (1999).The discovery data for the sample of SN Ia presented here are given in Table 1. All of the ...
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