Skip to header Skip to main navigation Skip to main content Skip to footer

website of the Royal Observatory of Belgium

Home
Astronomy & Astrophysics

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Topics
    • Binary Stars
    • Massive Stars
      • 3-D Radiative Transfer Modelling
      • Colliding Winds
      • Hypergiants
      • Stellar Winds
    • Stellar Evolution
      • AGB Stars
      • Nebulae
    • Stellar Evolution
    • Stellar Rotation
    • Variable Stars
  • Projects
    • BINA
    • BISTRO
    • BRASS
    • Cloudy
    • Gaia
      • Gaia @ ROB
      • Gaia-ESO
      • Radial Velocities
    • HOACS
    • Hermes
    • LOK
    • MESS
    • MolPlan
      • MolPlan
      • Sakurai's Object
    • RUSTICCA
    • STARLAB
    • VMC
    • digit
  • Staff
  • Papers
  • Press Releases
  • Data and Codes
  • Meetings
  • Jobs
  • Outreach
    • Carte du Ciel
    • Posters
    • Refractor

Gaia Data Release 3. The Galaxy in your preferred colours: Synthetic photometry from Gaia low-resolution spectra

06-2023

Gaia Collaboration ; Montegriffo, P. ; Bellazzini, M. ; ... ; Frémat, Y. ; ...  ; Blomme, R. ; ... ; Pauwels, T. ; ... ; Lobel, A. ; ... ; Samaras, N. ; et al

Gaia Data Release 3. The Galaxy in your preferred colours: Synthetic photometry from Gaia low-resolution spectra

 

Abstract :

 

Gaia Data Release 3 provides novel flux-calibrated low-resolution spectrophotometry for ≃220 million sources in the wavelength range 330 nm ≤ λ ≤ 1050 nm (XP spectra). Synthetic photometry directly tied to a flux in physical units can be obtained from these spectra for any passband fully enclosed in this wavelength range. We describe how synthetic photometry can be obtained from XP spectra, illustrating the performance that can be achieved under a range of different conditions - for example passband width and wavelength range - as well as the limits and the problems affecting it. Existing top-quality photometry can be reproduced within a few per cent over a wide range of magnitudes and colour, for wide and medium bands, and with up to millimag accuracy when synthetic photometry is standardised with respect to these external sources. Some examples of potential scientific application are presented, including the detection of multiple populations in globular clusters, the estimation of metallicity extended to the very metal-poor regime, and the classification of white dwarfs. A catalogue providing standardised photometry for ≃2.2 × 108 sources in several wide bands of widely used photometric systems is provided (Gaia Synthetic Photometry Catalogue; GSPC) as well as a catalogue of ≃105 white dwarfs with DA/non-DA classification obtained with a Random Forest algorithm (Gaia Synthetic Photometry Catalogue for White Dwarfs; GSPC-WD).

 

Publication : Astronomy & Astrophysics, Volume 674, id.A33, 58 pp.
DOI : 10.1051/0004-6361/202243709 
Bibcode : 2023A&A...674A..33G 
Keywords : catalogs; surveys; techniques: photometric; techniques: spectroscopic; stars: general; Galaxy: general; Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics; Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies; Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics

Powered by Drupal

administration

  • Log in

Legal Notices

  • Legal Notices

Copyright © 2026 Royal Observatory of Belgium - All rights reserved

OD3@ROB