Stellar variability in Gaia DR3. I. Three-band photometric dispersions for 145 million sources
J. Ma\'iz Apell\'aniz, G. Holgado, M. Pantaleoni Gonz\'alez, and J. A., Caballero

TL;DR
This study leverages Gaia DR3 data to measure and analyze stellar variability across different regions of the Milky Way, LMC, and SMC, providing a comprehensive catalog of photometric dispersions for 145 million sources.
Contribution
It introduces a method to convert Gaia photometric uncertainties into astrophysical variability indices and calibrates these using known variable stars, enabling large-scale variability analysis.
Findings
WDs and sdBs are more variable than MS or RC stars.
PMS stars show high variability with a power-law distribution.
Luminous red stars, especially AGB stars, exhibit the highest variability.
Abstract
CONTEXT: The unparalleled characteristics of Gaia photometry make it an excellent choice to study stellar variability. AIMS: To measure the phot. dispersion in G+G_BP+G_RP of the 145 677 450 Gaia DR3 5-parameter sources with G <= 17 mag and G_BP-G_RP with -1.0 to 8.0 mag. To use that unbiased sample to analyze stellar variability in the Milky Way, LMC, and SMC. METHODS: We convert from magnitude uncertainties to the observed phot. dispersions, calculate the instrumental component as a function of apparent magnitude and color, and use it to transform the observed dispersions into the astrophysical ones. We give variability indices in the three bands for the whole sample. We use the subsample of Rimoldini et al. that includes light curves and variability types to calibrate our results and establish their limitations. RESULTS: We use information from the MW, LMC, and SMC CAMDs to discuss…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
