Hipparcos - Published Catalogues

Published Catalogues

Principal observational characteristics of the Hipparcos and Tycho Catalogues. ICRS is the International Celestial Reference System.
Property Value
Common:
Measurement period 1989.8—1993.2
Catalogue epoch J1991.25
Reference system ICRS
• coincidence with ICRS (3 axes) ±0.6 mas
• deviation from inertial (3 axes) ±0.25 mas/yr
Hipparcos Catalogue:
Number of entries 118,218
• with associated astrometry 117,955
• with associated photometry 118,204
Mean sky density ≈3 per sq deg
Limiting magnitude V≈12.4 mag
Completeness V=7.3-9.0 mag
Tycho Catalogue:
Number of entries 1,058,332
• based on Tycho data 1,052,031
• with only Hipparcos data 6301
Mean sky density 25 per sq deg
Limiting magnitude V≈11.5 mag
Completeness to 90 per cent V≈10.5 mag
Completeness to 99.9 per cent V≈10.0 mag
Tycho 2 Catalogue:
Number of entries 2,539,913
Mean sky density:
• at b=0° ≈150 per sq deg
• at b=±30° ≈50 per sq deg
• at b=±90° ≈25 per sq deg
Completeness to 90 per cent V≈11.5 mag
Completeness to 99 per cent V≈11.0 mag

The final Hipparcos Catalogue was the result of the critical comparison and merging of the two (NDAC and FAST consortia) analyses, and contains 118,218 entries (stars or multiple stars), corresponding to an average of some three stars per square degree over the entire sky. Median precision of the five astrometric parameters (Hp<9 mag) exceeded the original mission goals, and are between 0.6–1.0 mas. Some 20,000 distances were determined to better than 10%, and 50,000 to better than 20%. The inferred ratio of external to standard errors is ≈1.0–1.2, and estimated systematic errors are below 0.1 mas. The number of solved or suspected double or multiple stars is 23,882. Photometric observations yielded multi-epoch photometry with a mean number of 110 observations per star, and a median photometric precision (Hp<9 mag) of 0.0015 mag, with 11,597 entries were identified as variable or possibly variable.

For the star mapper results, the data analysis was carried out by the Tycho Data Analysis Consortium (TDAC). The Tycho Catalogue comprises more than one million stars with 20–30 milliarc-sec astrometry and two-colour (B and V band) photometry.

The final Hipparcos and Tycho Catalogues were completed in August 1996. The catalogues were published by ESA on behalf of the scientific teams in June 1997.

A more extensive analysis of the star mapper (Tycho) data extracted additional faint stars from the data stream. Combined with old photographic plate observations made several decades earlier as part of the Astrographic Catalogue programme, the Tycho-2 Catalogue of more than 2.5 million stars (and fully superseding the original Tycho Catalogue) was published in 2000

The Hipparcos and Tycho-1 Catalogues were used to create the Millennium Star Atlas: an all-sky atlas of one million stars to visual magnitude 11. Some 10,000 nonstellar objects are also included to complement the catalogue data.

Between 1997 and 2007, investigations into subtle effects in the satellite attitude and instrument calibration continued. A number of effects in the data that had not been fully accounted for were studied, such as scan-phase discontinuities and micrometeoroid-induced attitude jumps. A re-reduction of the associated steps of the analysis was eventually undertaken. This has led to improved astrometric accuracies for stars brighter than Hp=9.0 mag, reaching a factor of about three for the brightest stars (Hp<4.5 mag), while also underlining the conclusion that the Hipparcos Catalogue as originally published is generally reliable within the quoted accuracies.

All catalogue data are available online from the Centre de Données astronomiques de Strasbourg.

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