I am working on an analysis project involving check stars in the AAVSO PEP program. Check stars and their associated comps are supposed not to vary, but, inevitably, some do. For this work, I want to screen out the variables. I have been using the discrete cosine transform in VStar to look for periodic variation. The variability is obvious many times, but not always, and I am looking for some pointers as to how to interpret the DCT output. In particular, I am unsure how high a power spike must be, relative to any others, to give confidence of a signal. Obviously, the quantity and "cleanliness" of the data are factors. Attached are some light curves and DC transforms.
V441 Her appears to experince a regular variation, and the DCT has one nice power spike. With rho Cas, the situation gets more complicated. Is there real periodicity, or just noise? CE Tau appears to have a smorgasboard of modest variations, and V1339 Cyg is somewhere in between.
Tom
Hi Tom
Let me begin with a few initial comments.
Let me quote Grant Foster (Analyzing Light Curves: A Practical Guide, p 125), as I often find myself doing:
Grant goes on to talk about significance in terms of chi square statistics, problems associated with treating these as indepedendent in the presence of different frequencies in irregularly sampled data, and that even with high power peaks on a periodogram (p 127), he reminds us that:
where the null hypothesis is that nothing but white noise is represented by the data. Also (on p 127), Grant says that:
So given the above and declaring myself to still be a student of period analysis myself (it's a big topic!), I'll make some other comments in subsequent posts.
David
Hi Tom
A couple of comments and a question.
Comments:
Questions:
Thanks.
David
David:
Yes, V441 Her is the check star - my oversight in labelling. The data for all four stars may be found at
http://cantordust.net/CHK/
The four files were created by massaging a standard AAVSO ascii download. In PEPHQ data, the check star magnitude is placed in the comment field. I wrote a script to extract the check magnitude and put it in the place of the program star magnitude. Be aware that check star magnitudes are not transformed or corrected for differential extinction. I have already found one check star that has very interesting extinction symptoms in a year's time frame.
Will get to your comments in another post.
Tom
I found a problem in some of the files so they have been regenerated. These are my "sf" or "standard filtered" files. Observations with an uncetrtainty greater than 20mmag have been removed, and all data points more than three sigma from the mean have also been removed. The ce_tau file was further prefiltered to remove observations with a different comp/check pair.
The power spike in v441_her is clearly the 1 year artifact.
Tom
Hi Tom
I've been trying to get back this thread for awhile.
Being busy at work, having a couple of rounds of non-trivial dental work and family commitments have left less free time than I'd like lately. Also, I've been preparing a new VStar release (should be out within a week), which, by the way, will include the filter-from-current-plot-view feature you asked about and that has been on my list for quite awhile.
Here are some thoughts on the CHK star data after taking a further look:
David