E. Plachy
Hungarian Academy of Sciences
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Featured researches published by E. Plachy.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017
A. Derekas; E. Plachy; László Molnár; Á. Sódor; J. M. Benkő; László Szabados; Zs. Bognár; B. Csak; Gy. M. Szabó; R. Szabó; A. Pál
We present a detailed analysis of the bright Cepheid-type variable star V1154 Cygni using 4 years of continuous observations by the Kepler space telescope. We detected 28 frequencies using standard Fourier transform method.We identified modulation of the main pulsation frequency and its harmonics with a period of ~159 d. This modulation is also present in the Fourier parameters of the light curve and the O-C diagram. We detected another modulation with a period of about 1160 d. The star also shows significant power in the low-frequency region that we identified as granulation noise. The effective timescale of the granulation agrees with the extrapolated scalings of red giant stars. Non-detection of solar-like oscillations indicates that the pulsation inhibits other oscillations. We obtained new radial velocity observations which are in a perfect agreement with previous years data, suggesting that there is no high mass star companion of V1154 Cygni. Finally, we discuss the possible origin of the detected frequency modulations.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2015
László Molnár; A. Pál; E. Plachy; V. Ripepi; M. I. Moretti; R. Szabó; L. L. Kiss
We present the first observations of extragalactic pulsating stars in the K2 ecliptic survey of the Kepler space telescope. Variability of all three RR Lyrae stars in the dwarf spheroidal galaxy Leo IV were successfully detected, at a brightness of Kp~21.5 mag, from data collected during Campaign 1. We identified one modulated star and another likely Blazhko candidate with periods of 29.8+-0.9 d and more than 80 d, respectively. EPIC 210282473 represents the first star beyond the Magellanic Clouds for which the Blazhko period and cycle-to-cycle variations in the modulation were unambiguously measured.The photometric [Fe/H] indices of the stars agree with earlier results that Leo IV is a very metal-poor galaxy. Two out of three stars blend with brighter background galaxies in the K2 frames. We demonstrate that image subtraction can be reliably used to extract photometry from faint confused sources that will be crucial not only for the K2 mission but for future space photometric missions as well.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2018
B. Holl; Marc Audard; K. Nienartowicz; G. Jevardat de Fombelle; O. Marchal; Nami Mowlavi; G. Clementini; J. De Ridder; D. W. Evans; L. P. Guy; A. C. Lanzafame; Thomas Lebzelter; L. Rimoldini; M. Roelens; Shay Zucker; Elisa Distefano; A. Garofalo; I. Lecoeur-Taibi; M. Lopez; R. Molinaro; T. Muraveva; A. Panahi; S. Regibo; V. Ripepi; L. M. Sarro; C. Aerts; Richard I. Anderson; J. Charnas; F. Barblan; S. Blanco-Cuaresma
Context. The Gaia Data Release 2 (DR2) contains more than half a million sources that are identified as variable stars. Aims: We summarise the processing and results of the identification of variable source candidates of RR Lyrae stars, Cepheids, long-period variables (LPVs), rotation modulation (BY Dra-type) stars, δ Scuti and SX Phoenicis stars, and short-timescale variables. In this release we aim to provide useful but not necessarily complete samples of candidates. Methods: The processed Gaia data consist of the G, GBP, and GRP photometry during the first 22 months of operations as well as positions and parallaxes. Various methods from classical statistics, data mining, and time-series analysis were applied and tailored to the specific properties of Gaia data, as were various visualisation tools to interpret the data. Results: The DR2 variability release contains 228 904 RR Lyrae stars, 11 438 Cepheids, 151 761 LPVs, 147 535 stars with rotation modulation, 8882 δ Scuti and SX Phoenicis stars, and 3018 short-timescale variables. These results are distributed over a classification and various Specific Object Studies tables in the Gaia archive, along with the three-band time series and associated statistics for the underlying 550 737 unique sources. We estimate that about half of them are newly identified variables. The variability type completeness varies strongly as a function of sky position as a result of the non-uniform sky coverage and intermediate calibration level of these data. The probabilistic and automated nature of this work implies certain completeness and contamination rates that are quantified so that users can anticipate their effects. Thismeans that even well-known variable sources can be missed or misidentified in the published data. Conclusions: The DR2 variability release only represents a small subset of the processed data. Future releases will include more variable sources and data products; however, DR2 shows the (already) very high quality of the data and great promise for variability studies.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2017
Gy. M. Szabó; A. Pál; Cs. Kiss; L. L. Kiss; László Molnár; O. Hanyecz; E. Plachy; K. Sarneczky; R. Szabó
We present fully covered phased light curves for 56 Jovian Trojan asteroids as observed by the K2 mission of the Kepler space telescope. This set of objects has been monitored during Campaign 6 and represents a nearly unbiased subsample of the population of small solar system bodies. We derived precise periods and amplitudes for all Trojans, and found their distributions to be compatible with the previous statistics. We point out, however, that ground-based rotation periods are often unreliable above 20 h, and we find an overabundance of rotation periods above 60 h compared with other minor planet populations. From amplitude analysis we derive a rate of binarity of 20 ± 5%. Our spin rate distribution confirms the previously obtained spin barrier of ~5 h and the corresponding ~0.5 g cm -3 cometary-like density limit, also suggesting a high internal porosity for Jovian Trojans. One of our targets, asteroid 65227 exhibits a double rotation period, which can either be due to binarity or the outcome of a recent collision.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017
E. Plachy; L. Molnár; M. I. Jurkovic; R. Smolec; P. Moskalik; A. Pál; László Szabados; R. Szabó
We present the first analysis of W Vir stars observed by the Kepler space telescope in the K2 mission. Clear cycle-to-cycle variation were detected in the light curves of KT Sco and the globular cluster member M80-V1. While the variations in the former star seems to be irregular on the short time scale of the K2 data, the latter appears to experience period doubling in its pulsation. Ground-based colour data confirmed that both stars are W Vir-type pulsators, while a comparison with historical photometric time-series data revealed drastic period changes in both stars. For comparison we reexamine ground-based observations of W Vir, the prototype of the class, and conclude that it shows period doubling instead of mode beating. These results support the notion that nonlinear dynamics plays an important role in the pulsation of W Virginis-type stars.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016
R. Szabó; A. Pál; K. Sarneczky; Gy. M. Szabó; László Molnár; L. L. Kiss; O. Hanyecz; E. Plachy; Cs. Kiss
Context. Because the second reaction wheel failed, a new mission was conceived for the otherwise healthy Kepler space telescope. In the course of the K2 mission, the telescope is staring at the plane of the Ecliptic. Thousands of solar system bodies therefore cross the K2 fields and usually cause additional noise in the highly accurate photometric data. Aims. We here follow the principle that some person’s noise is another person’s signal and investigate the possibility of deriving continuous asteroid light curves. This is the first such endeavor. In general, we are interested in the photometric precision that the K2 mission can deliver on moving solar system bodies. In particular, we investigate space photometric optical light curves of main-belt asteroids. Methods. We studied the K2 superstamps that cover the fields of M35, and Neptune together with Nereid, which were observed in the long-cadence mode (29.4 min sampling). Asteroid light curves were generated by applying elongated apertures. We used the Lomb-Scargle method to determine periodicities that are due to rotation. Results. We derived K2 light curves of 924 main-belt asteroids in the M35 field and 96 in the path of Neptune and Nereid. The light curves are quasi-continuous and several days long. K2 observations are sensitive to longer rotational periods than typical ground-based surveys. Rotational periods are derived for 26 main-belt asteroids for the first time. The asteroid sample is dominated by faint objects (>20 mag). Owing to the faintness of the asteroids and the high density of stars in the M35 field, only 4.0% of the asteroids with at least 12 data points show clear periodicities or trends that signal a long rotational period, as opposed to 15.9% in the less crowded Neptune field. We found that the duty cycle of the observations had to reach ~60% to successfully recover rotational periods.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2014
E. Plachy; J. M. Benkő; Z. Kolláth; László Molnár; R. Szabó
We present a detailed nonlinear dynamical investigation of the Blazhko mod- ulation of the Kepler RR Lyrae star V783 Cyg (KIC 5559631). We used different techniques to produce modulation curves, including the determination of amplitude maxima, the O–C diagram and the analytical function method. We were able to fit the modulation curves with chaotic signals with the global flow reconstruction method. However, when we investigated the effects of instrumental and data processing artefacts we found that due to the technical problems of data stitching, detrending and the sparse sampling, the chaotic nature of the modulation can not be proved. Moreover, we found that a considerable part of the detected cycle-to-cycle variation of the modulation may originate from these effects. According to our results, even the four-year-long, unprecedented Kepler space photometry of V783 Cyg is too short for a reliable nonlinear dynamical analysis aiming at the detection of chaos from the Blazhko modulation. We estimate that two other stars could be eligible for similar analysis in the Kepler sample and in the future TESS and PLATO may provide additional candidates.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016
László Molnár; A. Derekas; R. Szabó; Jaymie M. Matthews; Chris Cameron; A. F. J. Moffat; Noel D. Richardson; B. Csak; Á. Dózsa; Phillip A. Reed; László Szabados; Bernard Heathcote; T. Bohlsen; Paulo Cacella; Paul Luckas; Á. Sódor; M. Skarka; Gy. M. Szabó; E. Plachy; József Kovács; Nancy Remage Evans; K. Kolenberg; Karen A. Collins; Joshua Pepper; Keivan G. Stassun; Joseph E. Rodriguez; Robert J. Siverd; J.-A. A. Henden; Lech Mankiewicz; A. F. Żarnecki
Space-based photometric measurements first revealed low-amplitude irregularities in the pulsations of Cepheid stars, but their origins and how commonly they occur remain uncertain. To investigate this phenomenon, we present MOST space telescope photometry of two Cepheids. V473 Lyrae is a second-overtone, strongly modulated Cepheid, while U Trianguli Australis is a Cepheid pulsating simultaneously in the fundamental mode and first overtone. The nearly continuous, high-precision photometry reveals alternations in the amplitudes of cycles in V473 Lyr, the first case of period doubling detected in a classical Cepheid. In U TrA, we tentatively identify one peak as the
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016
Zs. Bognár; M. Paparó; László Molnár; P. I. Pápics; E. Plachy; E. Verebélyi; Á. Sódor
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arXiv: Solar and Stellar Astrophysics | 2017
László Molnár; E. Plachy; Péter Klagyivik; Áron L. Juhász; R. Szabó; Zachary D'Alessandro; Benjamin Kratz; Justin Ortega; Shashi M. Kanbur; M. J. P. F. G. Monteiro; M. S. Cunha; J.M.T.S. Ferreira
or 0.61-type mode often seen in conjunction with the first radial overtone in Cepheids, but given the short length of the data, we cannot rule out that it is a combination peak instead. Ground-based photometry and spectroscopy were obtained to follow two modulation cycles in V473 Lyr and to better specify its physical parameters. The simultaneous data yield the phase lag parameter (the phase difference between maxima in luminosity and radial velocity) of a second-overtone Cepheid for the first time. We find no evidence for a period change in U TrA or an energy exchange between the fundamental mode and the first overtone during the last 50 years, contrary to earlier indications. Period doubling in V473 Lyr provides a strong argument that mode interactions do occur in some Cepheids and we may hypothesise that it could be behind the amplitude modulation, as recently proposed for Blazhko RR Lyrae stars.