An error occurred during the production process of the original published version. The following names were omitted from theauthor list: R. Haigron, D. Hatzidimitriou, M. Hauser, M. Haywood, U. Heiter, J. Heu, T. Hilger. The original published version hasbeen corrected together with the publication of this corrigendum.
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2020 (v1)PublicationUploaded on: December 4, 2022
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2018 (v1)Journal article
Aims. The Radial Velocity Spectrometer (RVS) on board the ESA satellite mission Gaia has no calibration device. Therefore, the radial velocity zero point needs to be calibrated with stars that are proved to be stable at a level of 300 m s−1 during the Gaia observations.Methods. We compiled a dataset of ~71 000 radial velocity measurements from...
Uploaded on: December 4, 2022 -
2018 (v1)Journal article
Aims. The Radial Velocity Spectrometer (RVS) on board the ESA satellite mission Gaia has no calibration device. Therefore, the radial velocity zero point needs to be calibrated with stars that are proved to be stable at a level of 300 m s−1 during the Gaia observations.Methods. We compiled a dataset of ~71 000 radial velocity measurements from...
Uploaded on: February 22, 2023 -
2023 (v1)Journal article
Context. The second Gaia data release, DR2, contained radial velocities of stars with effective temperatures up to Teff = 6900 K. The third data release, Gaia DR3, extends this up to Teff = 14 500 K. Aims: We derive the radial velocities for hot stars (i.e., in the Teff = 6900 − 14 500 K range) from data obtained with the Radial Velocity...
Uploaded on: July 2, 2023 -
2023 (v1)Journal article
Context.Gaia Data Release 3 (DR3) contains the first release of magnitudes estimated from the integration of Radial Velocity Spectrometer (RVS) spectra for a sample of about 32.2 million stars brighter than GRVS ∼ 14 mag (or G ∼ 15 mag). Aims: In this paper, we describe the data used and the approach adopted to derive and validate the GRVS...
Uploaded on: July 5, 2023 -
2019 (v1)Publication
The Radial Velocity Spectrometer (RVS) on board of Gaia having no calibration device, the zero point of radial velocities needs to be calibrated with stars proved to be stable at the level of 300m/s during the Gaia observations. A dataset of about 71000 ground-based radial velocity measurements from five high resolution spectrographs has been...
Uploaded on: December 4, 2022