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The ASAS-SN Catalog of Variable Stars V: Variables in the Southern Hemisphere

Authors :
Jayasinghe, T.
Stanek, K. Z.
Kochanek, C. S.
Shappee, B. J.
Holoien, T. W. -S.
Thompson, Todd A.
Prieto, J. L.
Dong, Subo
Pawlak, M.
Pejcha, O.
Shields, J. V.
Pojmanski, G.
Otero, S.
Hurst, N.
Britt, C. A.
Will, D.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The All-Sky Automated Survey for Supernovae (ASAS-SN) provides long baseline (${\sim}4$ yrs) light curves for sources brighter than V$\lesssim17$ mag across the whole sky. As part of our effort to characterize the variability of all the stellar sources visible in ASAS-SN, we have produced ${\sim}30.1$ million V-band light curves for sources in the southern hemisphere using the APASS DR9 catalog as our input source list. We have systematically searched these sources for variability using a pipeline based on random forest classifiers. We have identified ${\sim} 220,000$ variables, including ${\sim} 88,300$ new discoveries. In particular, we have discovered ${\sim}48,000$ red pulsating variables, ${\sim}23,000$ eclipsing binaries, ${\sim}2,200$ $\delta$-Scuti variables and ${\sim}10,200$ rotational variables. The light curves and characteristics of the variables are all available through the ASAS-SN variable stars database (https://asas-sn.osu.edu/variables). The pre-computed ASAS-SN V-band light curves for all the ${\sim}30.1$ million sources are available through the ASAS-SN photometry database (https://asas-sn.osu.edu/photometry). This effort will be extended to provide ASAS-SN light curves for sources in the northern hemisphere and for V$\lesssim17$ mag sources across the whole sky that are not included in APASS DR9.<br />Comment: 17 pages, 14 figures. Accepted by MNRAS

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1907.10609
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stz2711