Periodicity search as a tool for disentangling the contaminated colour light curve of CoRoT 102781750

Abstract

The star CoRoT102781750 reveals a puzzle, showing a very complex and altering variation in different `CoRoT colours'. We established without doubt that more than a single star was situated within the CoRoT mask. Using a search for periodicity as a tool, our aim is to disentangle the composite light curve and identify the type of sources behind the variability. Both flux and magnitude light curves were used. Conversion was applied after a jump- and trend-filtering algorithm. We applied different types of period-finding techniques including MuFrAn and Period04. The amplitude and phase peculiarities obtained from the independent analysis of CoRoT r, g, and b colours and ground-based follow-up photometric observations ruled out the possibility of either a background monoperiodic or a Blazhko type RR Lyrae star being in the mask. The main target, an active star, shows at least two spotted areas that reveal a Prot = 8.8 hours (f0 = 2.735 c d-1) mean rotation period. The evolution of the active regions helped to derive a period change of dP/dt = 1.6· 10-6 (18 s over the run) and a differential rotation of α = / = 0.0074. The 0 015 linear decrease and a local 0 005 increase in the dominant period's amplitude are interpreted as a decay of the old spotted region and an appearance of a new one, respectively. A star that is detected only in the CoRoT b domain shows a f1 = 7.172 c d-1 pulsation connected to a 14 83 periodicity via an equidistant triplet structure. The best explanation for our observation is a β Cep star with a corotating dust disk.

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