Bibcode
Hammersley, P. L.; Jourdain de Muizon, M.
Bibliographical reference
`The calibration legacy of the ISO Mission', proceedings of a conference held Feb 5-9, 2001. Edited by L. Metcalfe, A. Salama, S.B. Peschke and M.F. Kessler. Published as ESA Publications Series, ESA SP-481. European Space Agency, 2003, p. 129.
Advertised on:
0
2003
Citations
6
Refereed citations
6
Description
The ISO ground-based preparatory programme working group (ISO-GBPPwg)
was set the goal in 1990 to characterise accurately in the infrared
some 400 stars covering the whole sky. Telescopes in Chile, Hawaii and
the Canary Islands were used to obtain J, H, K, and L photometry for all
of these stars and, for the brightest ones, spectroscopy and/or N and Q
bolometry. The stars were chosen single and non-variable, with spectral
type in the range K9 to A0 and luminosity class III to V. The stellar
effective temperatures (Te) were determined using the
Infrared Flux Method and the V-K versus Te relationship. The
results from both methods were combined with the surface gravity and
metallicity to give the spectral energy distributions up to about 50
μm, from the Kurucz stellar model atmosphere grids. Tests were then
made to confirm the accuracy of the spectral energy distributions over
the required wavelength range.