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A&A 428, 925-934 (2004)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20040457
A photometric pilot study on Sonneberg archival patrol plates
How many "constant" stars are in fact long-term variables?
N. Vogt1, 2, P. Kroll1 and E. Splittgerber11 Sonneberg Observatory, Sternwartestr. 32, 96515 Sonneberg, Germany
e-mail: pk@4pisysteme.de
2 Instituto de Astronomia, Universidad Catolica del Norte, Avenida Angamos 0610, Antofagasta, Chile
(Receiced 16 March 2004 / Accepted 7 June 2004 )
Abstract
The light curves of 216 arbitrarly chosen field stars and of 23 known variables in
the Aur/Tau/Ori region were derived (
) from scanned,
blue-sensitive archival patrol plates, covering a total of 34 years (1961-1995).
We achieved a photometric accuracy of 0.07 ... 0.12 mag in spite of rather unfavourable
locations of most stars near the plate borders. 17 field stars turned out to
be variables, most of them with time scales of 1000-8000 days in the form of slow
waves with amplitudes between 0.1 and 0.3 mag, i.e. below the threshold
of traditional variable searches on photographic plates. About 50% of these new
long-term variables exhibit drifts indicating periodic or erratic variability
at much longer time scales than covered here. For the 23 known variables we achieved
improvements in their periods and amplitudes and detected long-term
variations (drifts, waves) in about 50% of them. The above fraction of
low-amplitude long-term variables among field stars
implies that a total of about 45 000 new variables should be detectable
in the Sonneberg patrol plate archive. They will represent a new, hitherto not
investigated population of variable stars with a possibly significant
impact on our understanding of the stellar interior and evolution.
Key words: stars: variables: general -- stars: evolution
SIMBAD Objects
© ESO 2004
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