Bibcode
DOI
Karoff, C.; Rauer, H.; Erikson, A.; Voss, H.; Kabath, P.; Wiese, T.; Deleuil, M.; Moutou, C.; Meunier, J. C.; Deeg, H.
Bibliographical reference
The Astronomical Journal, Volume 134, Issue 2, pp. 766-777.
Advertised on:
8
2007
Citations
18
Refereed citations
17
Description
The COROT space mission will monitor several target fields for up to 150
days to perform asteroseismology and to search for extrasolar planets by
photometric transits. Variable stars in the target fields are important
objects for additional scientific studies but can also disturb the
search for planetary transits. A variability characterization of the
target fields prior to COROT observations is therefore important for two
reasons: to find interesting variable stars to monitor further and to
make an analysis of the impact of the variable stars on detecting
extrasolar planet transits with COROT. The Berlin Exoplanet Search
Telescope (BEST) is a small wide-angle telescope dedicated to
high-precision photometry. It has observed a 9 deg2 field of
view centered at (α,
δ)=(19h00m00.0s,
+00deg01'55.2'') (J2000.0) over 98
nights to search for variable stars in the surroundings of the first
long-run target field (LRc1) of the COROT space mission. In this data
set we identified 92 periodic variable stars, 86 of which are new
discoveries and 6 of which are known from the General Catalogue of
Variable Stars (GCVS). For five of the GCVS stars, variability could not
be confirmed. Forty-three of the 92 detected periodic variable stars are
identified as eclipsing binaries. We have evaluated the completeness of
our survey for eclipsing binaries by comparing it to the expected
fraction of eclipsing binaries based on Hipparcos observations. From
this evaluation we show that the BEST data set presented here has a
completeness of 20%-30% for periods longer than 1 day and is complete
relative to Hipparcos for short-period binaries.