4.6 Article

The K2 Bright Star Survey. I. Methodology and Data Release

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL SUPPLEMENT SERIES
Volume 245, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.3847/1538-4365/ab3d29

Keywords

Asteroseismology; Photometry; Astronomical techniques; Eclipsing binary stars; Red giant stars; Variable stars

Funding

  1. K2 team as part of the Guest Observer Programs [GO6081-7081, GO8025, GO9923, GO10025, GO11047-13047, GO14003-16003, GO17051-19051]
  2. Director's Discretionary Time program in Campaign 4 [GO4901]
  3. National Aeronautics and Space Administration through K2 Guest Observer Programs [NNX17AF76G, 80NSSC18K0362, 80NSSC19K0108]
  4. NASA through the Sagan Fellowship Program
  5. Clarendon Fund
  6. Balliol College
  7. Australian Research Council [DP150100250]
  8. Villum Foundation [10118]
  9. UK Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC) [ST/N000919/1, ST/S000488/1, ST/R004846/1]
  10. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme [670519: MAMSIE]
  11. KU Leuven Research Council [C16/18/005: PARADISE]
  12. NASA [NAS5-26555]
  13. NASA Office of Space Science [NNX13AC07G]
  14. Group of Eight universities
  15. German Academic Exchange Service through the Go8 Australia-Germany Joint Research Co-operation Scheme
  16. NASA [NNX17AF76G, 1002203] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER
  17. STFC [ST/S000488/1, ST/N000919/1] Funding Source: UKRI

Ask authors/readers for more resources

While the Kepler mission was designed to look at tens of thousands of faint stars (V ? 12), brighter stars that saturated the detector are important because they can be and have been observed very accurately by other instruments. By analyzing the unsaturated scattered-light ?halo? around these stars, we retrieved precise light curves of most of the brightest stars in K2 fields from Campaign4 onward. The halo method does not depend on the detailed cause and form of systematics, and we show that it is effective at extracting light curves from both normal and saturated stars. The key methodology is to optimize the weights of a linear combination of pixel time series with respect to an objective function. We test a range of such objective functions, finding that lagged Total Variation, a generalization of Total Variation, performs well on both saturated and unsaturated K2 targets. Applying this to the bright stars across the K2 Campaigns reveals stellar variability ubiquitously, including effects of stellar pulsation, rotation, and binarity. We describe our pipeline and present a catalog of the 161 bright stars, with classifications of their variability, asteroseismic parameters for red giants with well-measured solar-like oscillations, and remarks on interesting objects. These light curves are publicly available as a High Level Science Product from the Mikulski Archive for Space Telescopes (footnote 17).

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