Stellar variability in low-extinction regions towards the Galactic Bulge

Intensive monitoring of low-extinction windows towards the galactic bulge has provided in recent years valuable information for studies about the dynamics, kinematics and formation history of this part of the galaxy, mainly by characterizing the bulge stellar populations (Paczyński 1996). Since 1997...

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Published inAstronomy & astrophysics. Supplement series Vol. 139; no. 2; pp. 321 - 334
Main Authors Dominici, T. P., Horvath, J. E., Medina Tanco, G. A., Teixeira, R., Benevides-Soares, P.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published EDP Sciences 01.10.1999
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Summary:Intensive monitoring of low-extinction windows towards the galactic bulge has provided in recent years valuable information for studies about the dynamics, kinematics and formation history of this part of the galaxy, mainly by characterizing the bulge stellar populations (Paczyński 1996). Since 1997, we have been conducting an intensive photometric-astrometric survey of the galactic bulge, with the monitoring of about 120000 stars in 12 windows uniformly distributed in galactic latitude and longitude (Blanco & Terndrup 1989; Blanco 1988) never before submitted to this kind of survey. For this purpose, we have used the IAG/USP CCD Meridian Circle of the Abrahão de Moraes Observatory. The main objective of this project is the identification and classification of variable objects. In this work we present the set up and development of the necessary tools for a project like this and the posterior analysis of our data. We briefly describe the construction of a program to organize and detect variables among the observed stars, including real time alerts (for variations greater than 0.3 magnitudes). The preliminary analysis after the processing of 76 nights of observation yielded 479 variable stars, from which 96.7% of them are new. We discuss the preliminary classification of these variables, based on: a) the observed amplitude of variation; b) the shape of light curve; c) the expected variable classes among our data and d) the calculated periods, whenever possible. Finally, we discuss the future perspectives for the project and for the applications and analysis of the discovered variable stars.
Bibliography:publisher-ID:ds8752
ark:/67375/80W-DQS9JTBK-J
Tables 6–17 are only available at the CDS in electronic form only (ftp 130.79.128.5) or via http://cdsweb.u-strasbg.fr/Abstract.html
istex:77EAC3662CE2988C202B25B3D1EE132DC3467B8B
Send offprint request to: T.P. Dominici
ISSN:0365-0138
1286-4846
DOI:10.1051/aas:1999398