Michael Abdul-Masih
Kepler Eclipsing Binary Stars. Viii. Identification Of False Positive Eclipsing Binaries And Re-extraction Of New Light Curves
Abdul-Masih, Michael; Prša, Andrej; Conroy, Kyle; Bloemen, Steven; Boyajian, Tabetha; Doyle, Laurance R.; Johnston, Cole; Kostov, Veselin; Latham, David W.; Matijevič, Gal; Shporer, Avi; Southworth, John
Authors
Andrej Prša
Kyle Conroy
Steven Bloemen
Tabetha Boyajian
Laurance R. Doyle
Cole Johnston
Veselin Kostov
David W. Latham
Gal Matijevič
Avi Shporer
Dr John Taylor j.k.taylor@keele.ac.uk
Abstract
The Kepler mission has provided unprecedented, nearly continuous photometric data of ~200,000 objects in the ~105 deg2 field of view (FOV) from the beginning of science operations in May of 2009 until the loss of the second reaction wheel in May of 2013. The Kepler Eclipsing Binary Catalog contains information including but not limited to ephemerides, stellar parameters, and analytical approximation fits for every known eclipsing binary system in the Kepler FOV. Using target pixel level data collected from Kepler in conjunction with the Kepler Eclipsing Binary Catalog, we identify false positives among eclipsing binaries, i.e., targets that are not eclipsing binaries themselves, but are instead contaminated by eclipsing binary sources nearby on the sky and show eclipsing binary signatures in their light curves. We present methods for identifying these false positives and for extracting new light curves for the true source of the observed binary signal. For each source, we extract three separate light curves for each quarter of available data by optimizing the signal-to-noise ratio, the relative percent eclipse depth, and the flux eclipse depth. We present 289 new eclipsing binaries in the Kepler FOV that were not targets for observation, and these have been added to the catalog.
Citation
Abdul-Masih, M., Prša, A., Conroy, K., Bloemen, S., Boyajian, T., Doyle, L. R., …Southworth, J. (2016). Kepler Eclipsing Binary Stars. Viii. Identification Of False Positive Eclipsing Binaries And Re-extraction Of New Light Curves. Astronomical Journal, 151(4), Article 101. https://doi.org/10.3847/0004-6256/151/4/101
Journal Article Type | Article |
---|---|
Acceptance Date | Feb 9, 2016 |
Online Publication Date | Mar 28, 2016 |
Publication Date | Mar 28, 2016 |
Journal | Astronomical Journal |
Print ISSN | 0004-6256 |
Publisher | American Astronomical Society |
Peer Reviewed | Peer Reviewed |
Volume | 151 |
Issue | 4 |
Article Number | 101 |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.3847/0004-6256/151/4/101 |
Keywords | binaries, eclipsing, catalogs, methods, analytical, data analysis, statistical, techniques, photometric |
Publisher URL | https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.3847/0004-6256/151/4/101 |
Files
2016AJ....151..101A.pdf
(2.4 Mb)
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