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Re: Suspected Variables in TASS data
Yep, I agree with this too. One has a triage. Some are clean and clearly
variable. Some are questionable. Some are not. For the questionable
ones, we try to recruit a cops of follow up observers. The more the
better. That is why I was musing about a Mark V.
Tom Droege
At 04:37 PM 6/2/02 -0700, you wrote:
>Tom wrote:
> >Most of the ones we are looking at are quite clearly variable. One can
> >decide this once one learns something of the errors in the tass data and
> >then looks at a plot using say Rich Knowles' "selectun" , which allows a
> >rapid scan through suspects. The problem is only determining the
> >period. This is fraught with problems for such short samples.
> I fully agree with you, for the top dozen or two candidates. It is
>when you start pushing your variability limits closer to the threshold
>or when you start working in crowded regions that you will pick up
>the oddballs, and that you need to keep such errors in mind.
>They will happen! It is amazing how you can get seemingly consistent
>variability from photometric extraction problems.
>Arne