Gaia Data Release 1: Astrometry - one billion positions, two million proper motions and parallaxes
L. Lindegren, U. Lammers, U. Bastian, J. Hern\'andez, S. Klioner, D., Hobbs, A. Bombrun, D. Michalik, M. Ramos-Lerate, A. Butkevich, G. Comoretto,, E. Joliet, B. Holl, A. Hutton, P. Parsons, H. Steidelm\"uller, U. Abbas, M., Altmann, A. Andrei, S. Anton, N. Bach, C. Barache

TL;DR
Gaia DR1 provides astrometric data for over a billion stars, including positions, parallaxes, and proper motions, with high precision for the brightest stars, significantly advancing stellar catalog accuracy.
Contribution
This paper presents the first Gaia data release with extensive astrometric measurements, including model assumptions, data processing, and validation methods, marking a major step forward in stellar data accuracy.
Findings
Positions and motions for ~2 million bright stars with Hipparcos-level precision
Systematic errors are around 0.3 milliarcseconds for bright stars
Positions for remaining stars accurate to ~10 milliarcseconds
Abstract
Gaia Data Release 1 (Gaia DR1) contains astrometric results for more than 1 billion stars brighter than magnitude 20.7 based on observations collected by the Gaia satellite during the first 14 months of its operational phase. We give a brief overview of the astrometric content of the data release and of the model assumptions, data processing, and validation of the results. For stars in common with the Hipparcos and Tycho-2 catalogues, complete astrometric single-star solutions are obtained by incorporating positional information from the earlier catalogues. For other stars only their positions are obtained by neglecting their proper motions and parallaxes. The results are validated by an analysis of the residuals, through special validation runs, and by comparison with external data. Results. For about two million of the brighter stars (down to magnitude ~11.5) we obtain positions,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
