3,837 research outputs found
Spatially Dependent Photometric Activity of M dwarfs in the Solar Cylinder
We study the relationship between Galactic location () and photometric
activity for 3.6 million M dwarf stars within 1 kpc of the Sun. For this
purpose, we identify 906 unique flare events as a proxy for magnetic activity
from the SkyMapper Southern Survey DR3. We adopt vertical distance from
the Galactic disc as a proxy for age and confirm a strong trend of flaring
fraction decreasing with growing stellar age. Among M dwarfs within 50 pc of
the Sun, we find a flaring fraction of 1-in-1,500, independent of spectral type
from M2 to M7, suggesting that these stars are all in a flare-saturated young
evolutionary stage. We find a hint of a kink in the slope of the overall flare
fraction near 100 pc from the plane, where a steep decline begins; this slope
change is visible for mid-type M dwarfs (M3--M5), suggesting it is not an
artefact of mixing spectral type. Together with SDSS H emission, this
trend is additional evidence that the activity fraction of M dwarfs depends on
Galactic height and activity lifetime. While there is a hint of flattening of
the overall activity fraction above 500 pc, our data do not
constrain this further. Within 500 pc distance from the Sun, we find no
sign of radial disk gradients in flare activity, which may only be revealed by
samples covering a larger radial range.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures, Accepted for publication in MNRA
The EPOCH Project: I. Periodic variable stars in the EROS-2 LMC database
The EPOCH (EROS-2 periodic variable star classification using machine
learning) project aims to detect periodic variable stars in the EROS-2 light
curve database. In this paper, we present the first result of the
classification of periodic variable stars in the EROS-2 LMC database. To
classify these variables, we first built a training set by compiling known
variables in the Large Magellanic Cloud area from the OGLE and MACHO surveys.
We crossmatched these variables with the EROS-2 sources and extracted 22
variability features from 28 392 light curves of the corresponding EROS-2
sources. We then used the random forest method to classify the EROS-2 sources
in the training set. We designed the model to separate not only Scuti
stars, RR Lyraes, Cepheids, eclipsing binaries, and long-period variables, the
superclasses, but also their subclasses, such as RRab, RRc, RRd, and RRe for RR
Lyraes, and similarly for the other variable types. The model trained using
only the superclasses shows 99% recall and precision, while the model trained
on all subclasses shows 87% recall and precision. We applied the trained model
to the entire EROS-2 LMC database, which contains about 29 million sources, and
found 117 234 periodic variable candidates. Out of these 117 234 periodic
variables, 55 285 have not been discovered by either OGLE or MACHO variability
studies. This set comprises 1 906 Scuti stars, 6 607 RR Lyraes, 638
Cepheids, 178 Type II Cepheids, 34 562 eclipsing binaries, and 11 394
long-period variables. A catalog of these EROS-2 LMC periodic variable stars
will be available online at http://stardb.yonsei.ac.kr and at the CDS website
(http://vizier.u-strasbg.fr/viz-bin/VizieR).Comment: 18 pages, 20 figures, suggseted language-editing by the A&A editorial
office is applie
Detecting Variability in Massive Astronomical Time-series Data. II. Variable Candidates in the Northern Sky Variability Survey
We present variability analysis of data from the Northern Sky Variability Survey (NSVS). Using the clustering method, which defines variable candidates as outliers from large clusters, we cluster 16,189,040 light curves having data points at more than 15 epochs as variable and non-variable candidates in 638 NSVS fields. Variable candidates are selected depending on how strongly they are separated from the largest cluster and how rarely they are grouped together in eight-dimensional space spanned by variability indices. All NSVS light curves are also cross-correlated with IRAS , AKARI, Two Micron All Sky Survey, Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), and GALEX objects, as well as known objects in the SIMBAD database. The variability analysis and cross-correlation results are provided in a public online database, which can be used to select interesting objects for further investigation. Adopting conservative selection criteria for variable candidates, we find about 1.8 million light curves as possible variable candidates in the NSVS data, corresponding to about 10% of our entire NSVS sample. Multi-wavelength colors help us find specific types of variability among the variable candidates. Moreover, we also use morphological classification from other surveys such as SDSS to suppress spurious cases caused by blending objects or extended sources due to the low angular resolution of the NSVS.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/98631/1/1538-3881_143_3_65.pd
Detecting variability in massive astronomical time-series data. II. Variable candidates in the Northern Sky Variability Survey
We present variability analysis of data from the Northern Sky Variability Survey (NSVS). Using the clustering method, which defines variable candidates as outliers from large clusters, we cluster 16,189,040 light curves having data points at more than 15 epochs as variable and non-variable candidates in 638 NSVS fields. Variable candidates are selected depending on how strongly they are separated from the largest cluster and how rarely they are grouped together in eight-dimensional space spanned by variability indices. All NSVS light curves are also cross-correlated with IRAS, AKARI, Two Micron All Sky Survey, Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), and GALEX objects, as well as known objects in the SIMBAD database. The variability analysis and cross-correlation results are provided in a public online database, which can be used to select interesting objects for further investigation. Adopting conservative selection criteria for variable candidates, we find about 1.8 million light curves as possible variable candidates in the NSVS data, corresponding to about 10% of our entire NSVS sample. Multi-wavelength colors help us find specific types of variability among the variable candidates. Moreover, we also use morphological classification from other surveys such as SDSS to suppress spurious cases caused by blending objects or extended sources due to the low angular resolution of the NSV
Discovery of A New Blue Large-Amplitude Pulsator in the SkyMapper DR2: SMSS J184506.82-300804.7
We report the discovery of a new Blue Large-Amplitude Pulsator, SMSS
J184506-300804 (SMSS-BLAP-1) in Data Release 2 of the SkyMapper Southern Sky
Survey. We conduct high-cadence photometric observations in the band to
confirm a periodic modulation of the lightcurve. SMSS-BLAP-1 has a ~19-min
pulsation period with an amplitude of 0.2 mag in u band, and is similar to the
classical BLAPs found by OGLE. From spectroscopic observations with the
Wide-Field Spectrograph on the ANU 2.3m telescope, we confirm it as a
low-gravity BLAP: best-fit parameters from our spectral model grid are
estimated as = 27,000 K and (cm s) = 4.4.
Remarkably, we find evidence of a periodic signal in the residual lightcurve
that could hint at a non-radial pulsation mode, and an excess of Ca II K and Na
I D absorption from potential circumstellar material.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, Submitted to MNRA
Reconstructive challenge of dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans in the female breast
Dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans is an uncommon locally aggressive malignant neoplasm that most frequently appears in the trunk, followed by the extremities, head, and neck. But occurrence in the breast is extremely rare. We present a case of a 28-year-old woman, who had a history of trauma 5 years previously and excision 1 year before presentation at our clinic. We performed wide excision, together with microscopic and immunohistochemical analysis. No postoperative oncologic treatment was used and she remains disease-free 1 year after the surgery without any tumor recurrence. Here, we report a case of dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans in the female breast and present a detailed discussion of the diagnosis and treatment with reference to available literatures
Photometric flaring fraction of M dwarf stars from the SkyMapper Southern Survey
We present our search for flares from M dwarf stars in the SkyMapper Southern Survey DR1, which covers nearly the full Southern hemisphere with six-filter sequences that are repeatedly observed in the passbands uvgriz. This allows us to identify bona fide flares in single-epoch observations on time-scales of less than four minutes. Using a correlation-based outlier search algorithm we find 254 flare events in the amplitude range of u ā¼ 0.1 to 5 mag. In agreement with previous work, we observe the flaring fraction of M dwarfs to increase from ā¼30 to ā¼1000 per million stars for spectral types M0 to M5. We also confirm the decrease in flare fraction with larger vertical distance from the Galactic plane which is expected from declining stellar activity with age. Based on precise distances from Gaia DR2, we find a steep decline in the flare fraction from the plane to 150 pc vertical distance and a significant flattening towards larger distances. We then reassess the strong type dependence in the flaring fraction with a volume-limited sample within a distance of 50 pc from the Sun: in this sample the trend disappears and we find instead a constant fraction of ā¼1 650 per million stars for spectral types M1 to M5. Finally, large-amplitude flares with i > 1 mag are very rare with a fraction of ā¼0.5 per million M dwarfs. Hence, we expect that M-dwarf flares will not confuse SkyMapper's search for kilonovae from gravitational-wave events
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