Building the cosmic distance scale: from Hipparcos to Gaia
Catherine Turon, Xavier Luri, Eduard Masana

TL;DR
This paper reviews the evolution of stellar distance measurements from Hipparcos to Gaia, highlighting how Gaia's extensive data will revolutionize our understanding of the Milky Way and stellar properties.
Contribution
It discusses the advancements in astrometry from Hipparcos to Gaia and illustrates Gaia's potential for precise stellar distance and luminosity calibrations through simulations.
Findings
Hipparcos improved distance measurements for over 20,000 stars.
Gaia will measure distances for about 150 million stars with better than 10% accuracy.
Simulations show Gaia's potential to refine stellar and galactic models.
Abstract
Hipparcos, the first ever experiment of global astrometry, was launched by ESA in 1989 and its results published in 1997 (Perryman et al., Astron. Astrophys. 323, L49, 1997; Perryman & ESA (eds), The Hipparcos and Tycho catalogues, ESA SP-1200, 1997). A new reduction was later performed using an improved satellite attitude reconstruction leading to an improved accuracy for stars brighter than 9th magnitude (van Leeuwen & Fantino, Astron. Astrophys. 439, 791, 2005; van Leeuwen, Astron. Astrophys. 474, 653, 2007). The Hipparcos Catalogue provided an extended dataset of very accurate astrometric data (positions, trigonometric parallaxes and proper motions), enlarging by two orders of magnitude the quantity and quality of distance determinations and luminosity calibrations. The availability of more than 20000 stars with a trigonometric parallax known to better than 10% opened the way to a…
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.
