After matching the various catalog entries to targets listed
in the Kepler Input Catalog (KIC),
a second procedure was used to
determine which other IRT, KIS or UBV
targets were "on the detector".
In order to validate that objects from the non-KIC catalogs
appear on the Kepler detectors, we "associate"
them with their nearest KIC-object neighbors.
The basic idea is this:
if KIC target A is calculated to be
30 pixels from the closest detector edge, and
non-KIC target B is within 20 pixels of target A, then
target B must be at least 10 pixels from the edge
and therefore also on the detector.
Association process
Before associating KIC and non-KIC targets, the IRT entries
were matched to KIS entries, IRT entries to UBV entries,
and KIS entries to UBV entries. Matching was based roughly on a
separation of 1 arcsec or less (1.5 arcsec for UBV).
If a UBV or KIS source matched an IRT source they were considerd
the same target and their data was added to the IRT entry.
Based on cross-correlating the KIC with itself, it was found
that the KIC targets were almost always within 45 arcsec of each other.
Therefore, using 45 arcsec (i.e., roughly 11 pixels) as a search radius,
the IRT targets were found that were associated with the on-CCD KIC targets.
The distances between the KIC target and the
associated IRT targets were then compared to the distance between
the KIC target and the closest detector edge.
Subtracting the former from the latter was used as an estimate
for the distance to edge value.
This process was repeated for each of the 4 Kepler seasons and
each of the non-matched KIS and UBV entries.
For any season in which a non-KIC target was at least 4 or
more pixels from the edge, that target was considered on
the detector for that season.
Other Selection Criteria
A few other constraints were placed on the non-KIC
targets before they were added to the target
search interface:
Non-KIC targets must be on the detector
for at least one season to be included in the database.
The largest distance an included target was found
to be off the detector (in any given season) was about 8 pixels.
IRT-based targets must have J-Magnitude values
between 10 and 20.