We demonstrate the feasibility of determining magnitudes of stars on archival photographic plates using a commercially available scanner. We describe one photometric approach that could serve as a useful example for other studies. In particular, we measure and calibrate stellar magnitudes from a 1903 photographic plate from the Yerkes Observatory collection, and demonstrate that the overall precision from our methods is better than 0.10 mag. Notably, these measurements are dominated by intrinsic plate noise, rather than noise introduced through the scanning/digitization process. The low expense of this approach expands the scientific potential to study variable stars in the archives of observatory plate collections. We use the serendipitous discovery of a candidate transient at photographic magnitude pg = 16.60 in the spiral galaxy NGC 7331 to illustrate our photometric methods. If this unknown source is a supernova, it would represent the fourth known supernova in NGC 7331.
In the second paper in this series, we improve on our previous demonstration of the ability of a commercially available graphic arts scanner and cost-effective analysis tools to produce scientifically useful scans of astronomical photographic plates. We describe a method using freely available tools to extract magnitude measurements from the star images on sky-survey plates, such as are stored in observatory archives around the world. We detail the use of this method on one plate in particular, Plate 8 in E. E. Barnard’s A Photographic Atlas of Selected Regions of the Milky Way, examine the effects of our scanning method on our magnitude measurements, discuss the difficulties encountered when measuring the magnitudes of stars in crowded fields, and present a case study of red supergiant stars appearing within the field. Our work results in a catalog of more than 66,000 measurements of stellar positions and magnitudes in the central 6.°8 × 6.°8 field of view.
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