Large-amplitude variables in Gaia DR2 Virtual Observatory Resource

Authors
  1. Mowlavi N.
  2. Rimoldini L.
  3. Evans D.W.
  4. Riello M.
  5. De Angeli F.
  6. Palaversa L.,Audard M.
  7. Eyer L.
  8. Garcia-Lario P.
  9. Gavras P.
  10. Holl B.,Jevardat de Fombelle G.
  11. Lecoeur-Taibi I.
  12. Nienartowicz K.
  13. Published by
    CDS
Abstract

Photometric variability is an essential feature that sheds light on the intrinsic properties of celestial variable sources, the more so when photometry is available in various bands. In this respect, the all-sky Gaia mission is particularly attractive as it collects, among other quantities, epoch photometry measured quasi-simultaneously in three optical bands for sources ranging from a few magnitudes to fainter than magnitude twenty. The second data release (DR2) of the mission provides mean G, GBP and GRP photometry for 1.4 billion sources, but light curves and variability properties are available for only 0.5 million of them. Here, we provide a census of large-amplitude variables (LAVs) with amplitudes larger than 0.2mag in the G band for objects with mean brightnesses between 5.5 and 19mag. To achieve this, we rely on variability amplitude proxies in G, GBP and GRP computed from the uncertainties on the magnitudes published in DR2. We then apply successive filters to identify two subsets containing respectively sources with reliable mean GBP and GRP (for studies using colours) and sources having compatible amplitude proxies in G, GBP and GRP (for multi-band variability studies). The full catalogue gathers 23315874 LAV candidates, and the two subsets with increased levels of purity contain respectively 1148861 and 618966 sources. A multi-band variability analysis of the catalogue shows that different types of variable stars can be categorized according to their colour and blue-to-red amplitude ratios as determined from the G, GBP and GRP amplitude proxies. More specifically, four groups are globally identified. They mostly include long-period variables in a first group with amplitudes more than twice larger in the blue than in the red, hot compact variables in a second group with amplitudes smaller in the blue than in the red, classical instability strip pulsators in a third group with amplitudes larger in the blue than in the red by 50% to 80%, and other non-pulsating variables in a fourth group, mainly achromatic, but with still 10% of them having 20% to 50% larger amplitudes in the blue than in the red. The catalogue constitutes the first census of Gaia large amplitude variable (LAV) candidates, extracted from the public DR2 archive. The overview presented here illustrates the added-value of the mission for multi-band variability studies even at this stage when epoch photometry is not yet available for all sources.

Keywords
  1. Surveys
  2. Variable stars
  3. Photometry
Bibliographic source Bibcode
2021A&A...648A..44M
See also HTML
https://cdsarc.cds.unistra.fr/viz-bin/cat/J/A+A/648/A44
IVOA Identifier IVOID
ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/648/A44
Document Object Identifer DOI
doi:10.26093/cds/vizier.36480044

Access

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http://vizieridia.saao.ac.za/viz-bin/VizieR-2?-source=J/A+A/648/A44
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For use with a cone search client (e.g., TOPCAT).
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History

2021-04-09T06:39:37Z
Resource record created
2021-04-09T06:39:37Z
Created
2021-09-16T10:23:20Z
Updated

Contact

Name
CDS support team
Postal Address
CDS, Observatoire de Strasbourg, 11 rue de l'Universite, F-67000 Strasbourg, France
E-Mail
cds-question@unistra.fr