Cross-matching the General Catalogue of Variable Stars with the Gaia DR3 source catalogue
Abstract
The most recent release of the General Catalogue of Variable Stars (GCVS) (Samus et al. 2017) contains 518 different variable types, in eight different variable categories. The catalogue has now reached its 5th version available via the VizieR service and can be considered one of the primary catalogues on the subject. The Gaia Data Release 3 (DR3) contains the most extensive catalogue of variable stars over the entire sky, still it is an intermediate step towards a better understanding of the quality of data and the automated algorithms being put in place to achieve a more concise classification as the work progresses. Ongoing work to identify all variability types in Gaia requires that a complete set of variable classes is represented. We investigated the most recent variability types listed therein, and compared them to the literature used to classify variable stars in Gaia. We have come across close to 10 000 individual variables in the GCVS that are not classified as variable in Gaia DR3, which include 56 variability types - some of which are bright stars. In this investigation, we demonstrate that there are still a large number of those bright stars missing from the Gaia variable classification. Clear indications show that variables with very short (<1 d), and very long periods, were missed by Gaia DR3 Gaia (Prusti et al. 2016 and Vallenari et al. 2022). Moreover, variables with large amplitudes were also missing. We discuss our findings in some detail.
- Publication:
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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
- Pub Date:
- July 2023
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 2023MNRAS.522.6087A
- Keywords:
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- methods: data analysis;
- catalogues;
- stars: variables: general