Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2445/207408
Title: Variables in the Southern Polar Region Evryscope 2016 Data Set
Author: Ratzloff, Jeffrey K.
Corbett, Henry T.
Law, Nicholas M.
Barlow, Brad N.
Glazier, Amy
Howard, Ward S.
Fors Aldrich, Octavi
Ser Badia, Daniel del
Trifonov, Trifon
Keywords: Planetes
Satèl·lits
Regions polars
Planets
Satellites
Polar regions
Issue Date: 1-Aug-2019
Publisher: Astronomical Society of the Pacific
Abstract: The regions around the celestial poles offer the ability to find and characterize long-term variables from ground-based observatories. We used multi-year Evryscope data to search for high-amplitude (≈5% or greater) variable objects among 160,000 bright stars (mv < 14.5) near the South Celestial Pole. We developed a machine-learning-based spectral classifier to identify eclipse and transit candidates with M-dwarf or K-dwarf host stars, and potential low-mass secondary stars or gas-giant planets. The large amplitude transit signals from low-mass companions of smaller dwarf host stars lessens the photometric precision and systematics removal requirements necessary for detection, and increases the discoveries from long-term observations with modest light-curve precision among the faintest stars in the survey. The Evryscope is a robotic telescope array that observes the Southern sky continuously at 2-minute cadence, searching for stellar variability, transients, transits around exotic stars and other observationally challenging astrophysical variables. The multi-year photometric stability is better than 1% for bright stars in uncrowded regions, with a 3<em>σ</em> limiting magnitude of g = 16 in dark time. In this study, covering all stars 9 < mv < 14.5, in declinations −75° to −90°, and searching for high-amplitude variability, we recover 346 known variables and discover 303 new variables, including 168 eclipsing binaries. We characterize the discoveries and provide the amplitudes, periods, and variability type. A 1.7 RJ planet candidate with a late K-dwarf primary was found and the transit signal was verified with the PROMPT telescope network. Further follow-up revealed this object to be a likely grazing eclipsing binary system with nearly identical primary and secondary K5 stars. Radial-velocity measurements from the Goodman Spectrograph on the 4.1 meter SOAR telescope of the likely lowest-mass targets reveal that six of the eclipsing binary discoveries are low-mass (.06–.37 <em>M</em>⊙) secondaries with K-dwarf primaries, strong candidates for precision mass–radius measurements.
Note: Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1088/1538-3873/ab1d77
It is part of: Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, 2019, vol. 131, num.1002, p. 1-35
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2445/207408
Related resource: https://doi.org/10.1088/1538-3873/ab1d77
ISSN: 0004-6280
Appears in Collections:Articles publicats en revistes (Física Quàntica i Astrofísica)
Articles publicats en revistes (Institut de Ciències del Cosmos (ICCUB))

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