All spectroscopic observations in this paper were obtained with the 0.9-m
coudé feed telescope at Kitt Peak National Observatory (KPNO) during
runs in September 10-23, 1998 and February 11 through March 3, 1999 (a few
spectra were added from an earlier run in April 1998). Data were obtained
with a 30001000 CCD (Ford F3KB chip, 15
pixels) with grating
A, camera 5, the blue corrector, and the long collimator. Spectra were
obtained at blue wavelengths centered at 4020 Å to cover the two
Ca II H&K resonance lines at 3933 Å and 3968 Å as well as
the luminosity-sensitive strontium line, Sr II, at 4077 Å. Stars
with Ca II emission were also observed
at red wavelengths centered at 6630 Å to cover the Balmer H
line
at 6563 Å and the neutral lithium line at 6708 Å. The useful
wavelength coverage was 210 Å in the blue region and 300 Å in the
red wavelength region. The resolving power,
,
as measured from the full width at half maximum (FWHM) of the thorium-argon
comparison lamp lines, was 18 000 at 4020 Å and 25 000 at 6630 Å,
This is an effective wavelength resolution of 0.23 Å in the blue and
0.26 Å in the red (at dispersions of 4.7 Å/mm
and 7 Å/mm, respectively). The instrumental FWHM was thereby sampled
by 3.2 pixels and 2.5 pixels according to slit widths of 400
m in the
blue and 280
m in the red, respectively. Unless otherwise noted, all
blue spectra were obtained with an integration time of 5 min for stars
brighter than V = 8
0, with 7 min for stars between 8
0 - 8
8, and
with 10 min for stars fainter than 8
8. This allows for a signal-to-noise
(S/N) ratio in the continuum of approximately 20-40:1. The red-wavelength
spectra were obtained with integration times between 20 and 30 minutes
according to S/N ratios between 70-150:1. A typical spectrum for each
wavelength region is shown in Fig. 3.
All spectroscopic data were reduced with IRAF and included bias subtraction, flat fielding and optimized aperture extraction. Several wavelength comparison spectra and spectra of bright radial-velocity standards were obtained during each night to ensure an accurate wavelength calibration. Twenty flat-field exposures with a tungsten reference lamp were taken at the beginning of the night and again at the end of the night. These fourty flat fields were co-added and used to remove the pixel-to-pixel variations in the stellar spectra on a nightly basis. The F3KB CCD showed no obvious signs of fringing at red wavelengths (none is expected in the blue) and no attempts were made to correct for it other than the standard flat-field division. Continuum fitting with a low-order polynomial was sufficient to find a satisfactory continuum solution. The H&K region in the blue-wavelength spectra was excluded from the continuum solution.
Follow-up photometry of most of the stars with
Ca II H&K emission was obtained with Wolfgang, one of
the two 0.75-m Vienna Observatory automatic photoelectric
telescopes (APTs) at Fairborn Observatory in Arizona
(Strassmeier et al. [1997b]). All data were taken in and
transformed to Strömgren y. Integration time was set to 20 s for
each reading, except for stars fainter than
where
30 s were used.
Altogether, 8038 differential data points of 204 program stars are
presented in this paper where each is the mean of three readings of the
variable and four readings of the comparison star. This amount of data
is proportional to 670 hours of telescope time with
446 hours of actual
on-target integration. The observing sequence per target group was
Nav-C2-Sky-C-V-C-V-C-V-C-Sky-C2 (V=Variable). A second comparison
star (C2), furtherin called the check star, was observed twice
per differential group. A reading on the sky was taken before and at
the end of each V-C group while a bright navigation star (Nav)
was recorded with the CCD finder as the first reading for each target
group (these readings are for centering and are not of photometric quality).
The standard error of a nightly mean from the overall
seasonal mean was 0
003 in y (for more details see Strassmeier et al.
[1999]).
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