Periodicity search as a tool for disentangling the contaminated colour light curve of CoRoT 102781750
M. Papar\'o, M. Chadid, E. Chapellier, J.M. Benk\H{o}, R. Szab\'o, K., Kolenberg, E. Guggenberger, Zs. Reg\'aly, M. Auvergne, A. Baglin, W.W. Weiss

TL;DR
This study disentangles complex, multi-source stellar light curves using periodicity search techniques, revealing an active star with spots and a possible $eta$ Cep star with a dust disk, demonstrating the method's effectiveness.
Contribution
The paper introduces a periodicity search approach to disentangle composite light curves and identify multiple sources within the CoRoT data, including active and pulsating stars.
Findings
Identified the rotation period of the active star as 8.8 hours.
Detected a $eta$ Cep star with a corotating dust disk.
Ruled out background monoperiodic and RR Lyrae contamination.
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…
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