Photometric Variability of the Be Star Population
Jonathan Labadie-Bartz, Joshua Pepper, M. Virginia McSwain, J. E., Bjorkman, K. S. Bjorkman, Michael B. Lund, Joseph E. Rodriguez, Keivan G., Stassun, Daniel J. Stevens, B. Scott Gaudi, David J. James, Rudolf B. Kuhn,, Robert J. Siverd, Thomas G. Beatty

TL;DR
This study analyzes photometric variability in 610 Be stars using decade-long, high-cadence survey data, revealing common variability patterns and their correlation with spectral types, enhancing understanding of Be star behavior.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of Be star brightness variations across a large sample using wide-field survey data, identifying key variability features and their spectral correlations.
Findings
Most Be stars are photometrically variable.
25% show non-radial pulsations.
36% exhibit outbursts.
Abstract
Be stars have generally been characterized by the emission lines in their spectra, and especially the time variability of those spectroscopic features. They are known to also exhibit photometric variability at multiple timescales, but have not been broadly compared and analyzed by that behavior. We have taken advantage of the advent of wide-field, long-baseline, and high-cadence photometric surveys that search for transiting exoplanets to perform a comprehensive analysis of brightness variations among a large number of known Be stars. The photometric data comes from the KELT transit survey, with a typical cadence of 30 minutes, baseline of up to ten years, photometric precision of about 1%, and coverage of about 60% of the sky. We analyze KELT light curves of 610 known Be stars in both the Northern and Southern hemispheres in an effort to study their variability. Consistent with other…
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