Bibcode
de Diego, J. A.
Bibliographical reference
The Astronomical Journal, Volume 139, Issue 3, pp. 1269-1282 (2010).
Advertised on:
3
2010
Citations
128
Refereed citations
123
Description
Literature on optical and infrared microvariability in active galactic
nuclei (AGNs) reflects a diversity of statistical tests and strategies
to detect tiny variations in the light curves of these sources.
Comparison between the results obtained using different methodologies is
difficult, and the pros and cons of each statistical method are often
badly understood or even ignored. Even worse, improperly tested
methodologies are becoming more and more common, and biased results may
be misleading with regard to the origin of the AGN microvariability.
This paper intends to point future research on AGN microvariability
toward the use of powerful and well-tested statistical methodologies,
providing a reference for choosing the best strategy to obtain unbiased
results. Light curves monitoring has been simulated for quasars and for
reference and comparison stars. Changes for the quasar light curves
include both Gaussian fluctuations and linear variations. Simulated
light curves have been analyzed using χ2 tests, F tests
for variances, one-way analyses of variance and C-statistics.
Statistical Type I and Type II errors, which indicate the robustness and
the power of the tests, have been obtained in each case. One-way
analyses of variance and χ2 prove to be powerful and
robust estimators for microvariations, while the C-statistic is not a
reliable methodology and its use should be avoided.