Gaia broad band photometry
C. Jordi, M. Gebran, J.M. Carrasco, J. de Bruijne, H. Voss, C., Fabricius, J. Knude, A. Vallenari, R. Kohley, A. Mora

TL;DR
This paper provides relationships and tools to predict Gaia photometry, including transformations between Gaia and other photometric systems, to aid in data analysis, simulations, and planning for the Gaia mission.
Contribution
It introduces new color transformation relationships and absorption ratios for Gaia photometry based on stellar models, aiding future data analysis and planning.
Findings
Lowest residuals in transformations involving Gaia and Johnson-Cousins V-I_C and Sloan g-z.
Derived polynomial for T_eff and G_BP-G_RP for stars above 4500 K.
Computed Gaia passbands and their use in stellar models and isochrones.
Abstract
The scientific community needs to be prepared to analyse the data from Gaia, one of the most ambitious ESA space missions, to be launched in 2012. The purpose of this paper is to provide data and tools in order to predict in advance how Gaia photometry is expected to be. To do so, we provide relationships among colours involving Gaia magnitudes and colours from other commonly used photometric systems (Johnson-Cousins, SDSS, Hipparcos and Tycho). The most up-to-date information from industrial partners has been used to define the nominal passbands and based on the BaSeL3.1 stellar spectral energy distribution library, relationships were obtained for stars with different reddening values, ranges of temperatures, surface gravities and metallicities. The transformations involving Gaia and Johnson-Cousins V-I_C and Sloan DSS g-z colours have the lowest residuals. A polynomial expression for…
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.
