The Second-Generation Guide Star Catalog: Description and Properties
B. M. Lasker, M. G. Lattanzi, B. J. McLean, B. Bucciarelli, R., Drimmel, J. Garcia, G. Greene, F. Guglielmetti, C. Hanley, G. Hawkins, V. G., Laidler, C. Loomis, M. Meakes, R. Mignani, R. Morbidelli, J. Morrison, R., Pannunzio, A. Rosenberg, M. Sarasso, R. L. Smart, A. Spagna

TL;DR
The GSC-II is an extensive all-sky catalog derived from DSS plates, providing precise astrometry, photometry, and classification for nearly a billion objects, supporting space and ground-based telescopes and missions.
Contribution
This paper presents the second-generation GSC-II catalog with improved accuracy, larger coverage, and detailed object classification, enhancing its utility for astronomical observations and missions.
Findings
Contains data for 945 million objects down to R=20.
Astrometric accuracy ranges from 0.2 to 0.28 arcseconds.
Photometry accuracy is between 0.13 and 0.22 magnitudes.
Abstract
The GSC-II is an all-sky database of objects derived from the uncompressed DSS that the STScI has created from the Palomar and UK Schmidt survey plates and made available to the community. Like its predecessor (GSC-I), the GSC-II was primarily created to provide guide star information and observation planning support for HST. This version, however, is already employed at some of the ground-based new-technology telescopes such as GEMINI, VLT, and TNG, and will also be used to provide support for the JWST and Gaia space missions as well as LAMOST, one of the major ongoing scientific projects in China. Two catalogs have already been extracted from the GSC-II database and released to the astronomical community. A magnitude-limited (R=18.0) version, GSC2.2, was distributed soon after its production in 2001, while the GSC2.3 release has been available for general access since 2007. The…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
