Periodic variable A-F spectral type stars in the northern TESS continuous viewing zone

Autor: Skarka, M., Žák, J., Fedurco, M., Paunzen, E., Henzl, Z., Mašek, M., Karjalainen, R., Arias, J. P. Sanchez, Sódor, Á., Auer, R. F., Kabáth, P., Karjalainen, M., Liška, J., Štegner, D.
Rok vydání: 2022
Předmět:
Zdroj: A&A 666, A142 (2022)
Druh dokumentu: Working Paper
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/202244037
Popis: The goal of our study is to provide a reliable classification of variability of A-F stars brighter than 11 mag located in the northern TESS continuous viewing zone. We also aim at thorough discussion about issues in the classification related to the data characteristics and the issues arising from the similar light curve shape generated by different physical mechanisms. We used TESS long- and short-cadence photometric data and corresponding Fourier transform to classify the variability type of the stars. We present a clear and concise classification system that is demonstrated on many examples. We found clear signs of variability in 3025 of 5923 studied stars (51 %). For 1813 of these 3025 stars, we provide a classification. From the classified stars, 64.5 % are pulsating stars of GDOR and DSCT types and their hybrids. We realised that the long- and short-cadence PDCSAP data can differ significantly not only in amplitudes but also in the content of instrumental/data reduction artifacts making the long-cadence data less reliable. We identified a new group of stars showing stable light curves and characteristic frequency spectra pattern (8.5 % of the classified stars). According to the position in the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram, these stars are likely GDOR stars but are about 200 K cooler than GDORs on average and have smaller amplitudes and longer periods in average. We show that without spectroscopic observations, it can be impossible to unambiguously distinguish between ellipsoidal variability and rotational variability. We also apply our methodology to three previous studies and found significant discrepancies in the classification. We demonstrate how difficult the classification of variable A-F stars can be when using only photometric data.
Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A, 23 pages, 17 figures, 5 tables
Databáze: arXiv