Abstract
We analyzed data accumulated during 2005 and 2006 by the Taiwan-American Occultation Survey (TAOS) in order to detect short-period variable stars (periods of ≲1 hr) such as δ Scuti. TAOS is designed for the detection of stellar occultation by small-size Kuiper Belt Objects and is operating four 50 cm telescopes at an effective cadence of 5 Hz. The four telescopes simultaneously monitor the same patch of the sky in order to reduce false positives. To detect short-period variables, we used the fast Fourier transform algorithm (FFT) in as much as the data points in TAOS light curves are evenly spaced. Using FFT, we found 41 short-period variables with amplitudes smaller than a few hundredths of a magnitude and periods of about an hour, which suggest that they are low-amplitude δ Scuti stars. The light curves of TAOS δ Scuti stars are accessible online at the Time Series Center Web site (http://timemachine.iic.harvard.edu). © 2010. The American Astronomical Society.
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Kim, D. W., Protopapas, P., Alcock, C., Byun, Y. I., Kyeong, J., Lee, B. C., … Zhang, Z. W. (2010). The Taiwan-American occultation survey project stellar variability. I. Detection of low-amplitude δ Scuti stars. Astronomical Journal, 139(2), 757–764. https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-6256/139/2/757
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