Testing Microvariability in Quasar Differential Light Curves Using Several Field Stars

You are here: Home Submitted Papers 2015 / Testing Microvariability in Quasar Differential Light Curves Using Several Field Stars

Abstract

Microvariability consists of small timescale variations of low amplitude in the photometric light curves of quasars and represents an important tool to investigate their inner core. Detection of quasar microvariations is challenging because of their non-periodicity, as well as the need for high monitoring frequency and a high signal-to-noise ratio. Statistical tests developed for the analysis of quasar differential light curves usually show either low power or low reliability, or both. In this paper we compare two statistical procedures to perform tests on several stars with enhanced power and high reliability. We perform light curve simulations of variable quasars and non-variable stars and analyze them with statistical procedures developed from the F-test and the analysis of variance. The results show a large improvement in the power of both statistical probes and a larger reliability when several stars are included in the analysis. The results from the simulations agree with those obtained from observations of real quasars. The high power and high reliability of the tests discussed in this paper improve the results that can be obtained from short and long timescale variability studies. These techniques are not limited to quasar variability; on the contrary, they can be easily implemented for other sources, such as variable stars. Their applications to future research and to the analysis of large-field photometric monitoring archives could reveal new variable sources.

Author

de Diego, José A.; Polednikova, Jana; Bongiovanni, Angel; Pérez García, Ana M.; De Leo, Mario A.; Verdugo, Tomás; Cepa, Jordi

Journal

Astronomical Journal

Paper Publication Date

August 2015

Paper Type

Astrostatistics