Variability of Central Stars of Planetary Nebulae with the Zwicky Transient Facility. I. Methods, Short-Timescale Variables, Binary Candidates, and the Unusual Nucleus of WeSb 1
Over the past several decades, time-series photometry of CSPNe has yielded significant results including, but not limited to, discoveries of nearly 100 binary systems, insights into pulsations and winds in young white dwarfs, and studies of stars undergoing very late thermal pulses. We have undertak...
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Zusammenfassung: | Over the past several decades, time-series photometry of CSPNe has yielded
significant results including, but not limited to, discoveries of nearly 100
binary systems, insights into pulsations and winds in young white dwarfs, and
studies of stars undergoing very late thermal pulses. We have undertaken a
systematic study of optical photometric variability of cataloged CSPNe, using
the epochal photometric data from the Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF). By
applying appropriate variability metrics, we arrive at a list of 94
significantly variable CSPNe. Based on the timescales of the light-curve
activity, we classify the variables broadly into short- and long-timescale
variables. In this first paper in this series, we focus on the former, which is
the majority class comprising 83 objects. We infer periods for six sources for
the first time, and recover several known periodic variables. Among the
aperiodic sources, most exhibit a jitter around a median flux with a stable
amplitude, and a few show outbursts. We draw attention to WeSb 1, which shows a
different kind of variability: prominent deep and aperiodic dips, resembling
transits from a dust/debris disk. We find strong evidence for a binary nature
of WeSb 1 (possibly an A- to G-type companion). The compactness of the emission
lines and inferred high electron densities make WeSb 1 a candidate for either
an EGB 6-type planetary nucleus, or a symbiotic system inside an evolved
planetary nebula, both of which are rare objects. To demonstrate further
promise with ZTF, we report three additional newly identified periodic sources
that do not appear in the list of highly variable sources. Finally, we also
introduce a two-dimensional metric space defined by the von Neumann statistics
and Pearson Skew and demonstrate its effectiveness in identifying unique
variables of astrophysical interest, like WeSb 1. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2410.03589 |