Bibcode
Fliri, J.; Riffeser, A.; Seitz, S.; Bender, R.
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 445, Issue 2, January II 2006, pp.423-439
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1
2006
Journal
Citations
35
Refereed citations
31
Description
In this paper we present the WeCAPP catalogue of variable stars found in
the bulge of M 31. Observations in the WeCAPP microlensing survey
(optical R and I bands) for a period of three years (2000-2003) resulted
in a database with unprecedented time coverage for an extragalactic
variable star study. We detected 23781 variable sources in a 16.1 arcmin
× 16.6 arcmin field centered on the nucleus of M 31. The catalogue
of variable stars contains the positions, the periods, and the variation
amplitudes in the R and I bands. We classified the variables according
to their position in the R-band period-amplitude plane. Three groups can
be distinguished; while the first two groups can be mainly associated
with Cepheid-like variables (population I Cepheids in group I; type II
Cepheids and RV Tauri stars in group II), the third one consists of Long
Period Variables (LPVs). We detected 37 RV Tauri stars and 11 RV Tauri
candidates, which makes this catalogue one of the largest collections of
this class of stars to date. The classification scheme is supported by
Fourier decomposition of the light curves. Our data shows a correlation
of the low-order Fourier coefficients Φ21 with
Φ31 for classical Cepheids, as well as for type II
Cepheids and RV Tauri stars. Correlating our sample of variable stars
with X-ray based catalogues of Kaaret (2002, ApJ, 578, 114) and Kong et
al. (2002, ApJ, 577, 738) results in 23 and 31 coincidences, 8 and 12 of
which are M 31 globular clusters. The number density of detected
variables is clearly not symmetric, which has to be included in the
calculations of the expected microlensing event rate towards M 31. This
asymmetry is due to the enhanced extinction in the spiral arms
superimposed on the bulge of M 31, which reduces the number of sources
to about 60%, if compared to areas of equivalent bulge brightness
without enhanced extinction present.