4.7 Article

I Spy Transits and Pulsations: Empirical Variability in White Dwarfs Using Gaia and the Zwicky Transient Facility

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 912, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/abee68

Keywords

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Funding

  1. United States Department of Energy [DE-SC0010623]
  2. National Science Foundation [AST-1908119, AST-1812874, AST-1903828]
  3. Wootton Center for Astrophysical Plasma Properties under the United States Department of Energy [DE-NA0003843]
  4. TESS Guest Investigator Program [80NSSC19K0378, 80NSSC19K1720]
  5. K2 Guest Observer program [80NSSC19K0162]
  6. High Point University Student Government Association [S-18-48]
  7. NASA ADAP program [80NSSC20K0455]

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The study introduces a new method for detecting variable astrophysical objects and transient phenomena using Gaia and ZTF photometry. By applying this method, numerous new variable white dwarfs and white dwarfs likely to host transiting planetary debris were identified, significantly enriching research in the field.
We present a novel method to detect variable astrophysical objects and transient phenomena using anomalous excess scatter in repeated measurements from public catalogs of Gaia DR2 and Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF) DR3 photometry. We first provide a generalized, all-sky proxy for variability using only Gaia DR2 photometry, calibrated to white dwarf stars. To ensure more robust candidate detection, we further employ a method combining Gaia with ZTF photometry and alerts. To demonstrate its efficacy, we apply this latter technique to a sample of roughly 12,100 white dwarfs within 200 pc centered on the ZZ Ceti instability strip, where hydrogen-atmosphere white dwarfs are known to pulsate. By inspecting the top 1% of the samples ranked by these methods, we demonstrate that both the Gaia-only and ZTF-informed techniques are highly effective at identifying known and new variable white dwarfs, which we verify using follow-up, high-speed photometry. We confirm variability in all 33 out of 33 (100%) observed white dwarfs within our top 1% highest-ranked candidates, both inside and outside the ZZ Ceti instability strip. In addition to dozens of new pulsating white dwarfs, we also identify five white dwarfs highly likely to show transiting planetary debris; if confirmed, these systems would more than triple the number of white dwarfs known to host transiting debris.

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