Evryscope-South Survey of Upper-and Pre-main Sequence Solar Neighborhood Stars
NW Galliher, JK Ratzloff, H Corbett… - Publications of the …, 2020 - iopscience.iop.org
Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, 2020•iopscience.iop.org
Using photometric data collected by Evryscope-South, we search for nearby young variable
systems on the upper main sequence (UMS) and pre-main sequence (PMS). The
Evryscopes are all-sky high-cadence telescope arrays operating in the Northern and
Southern hemispheres. We base our search on a Gaia-selected catalog of young
neighborhood upper-and pre-main sequence stars which were chosen through both
astrometric and photometric criteria. We analyze 44,971 Evryscope-South light curves in …
systems on the upper main sequence (UMS) and pre-main sequence (PMS). The
Evryscopes are all-sky high-cadence telescope arrays operating in the Northern and
Southern hemispheres. We base our search on a Gaia-selected catalog of young
neighborhood upper-and pre-main sequence stars which were chosen through both
astrometric and photometric criteria. We analyze 44,971 Evryscope-South light curves in …
Abstract
Using photometric data collected by Evryscope-South, we search for nearby young variable systems on the upper main sequence (UMS) and pre-main sequence (PMS). The Evryscopes are all-sky high-cadence telescope arrays operating in the Northern and Southern hemispheres. We base our search on a Gaia-selected catalog of young neighborhood upper-and pre-main sequence stars which were chosen through both astrometric and photometric criteria. We analyze 44,971 Evryscope-South light curves in search of variability. We recover 615 variables, with 378 previously known, and 237 new discoveries including 84 young eclipsing binaries (EB) candidates. We discover a new highly eccentric binary system and recover a further four previously known systems, with periods ranging from 299 to 674 hr. We find 158 long-period (> 50 hr) candidate EB systems, 9 from the PMS and 149 from the UMS, which will allow constraints on the mass/radius/age relation. These long-period EBs include a 179.3 hr PMS system and a 867.8 hr system from the UMS. For PMS variable candidates we estimate system ages, which range from 1 to 23 Myr for non-EBs and from 2 to 17 Myr for EBs. Other non-EB discoveries that show intrinsic variability will allow relationships between stellar rotation rates, ages, activity, and mass to be characterized.
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