Aaron
Price
aavso@aavso.org
AAVSO Light Curves
Tools
AAVSO Lightcurve Generator
The AAVSO Lightcurves Tool
AAVSO Lightcurves
Introduction
&kstars; can display light curves for variable stars from the observing
program of the American Association
of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO). This
program monitors over 6,000 variable stars and consists of 10 million
observations going back almost a century. &kstars; downloads the very
latest data directly from the AAVSO database via the
Internet, so a network connection is required to use this tool.
To use the tool, select a variable star either by
designation or name in the left panel, and
set the start and end dates to be plotted. In the right panel,
select the type of data that should be plotted (see below). When you have
made you selections, press the Retrieve Curve
button. &kstars; will automatically connect to the AAVSO server,
which will generate the lightcurve plot and send it to your computer for
display. A sample lightcurve plot is shown below:
A Sample Lightcurve
Sample Lightcurve
Please not these light curves should NEVER be used
in research, papers, presentations, publications, &etc;. They are only
meant to be used as a source of info for &kstars;. They have not been
validated and passed the AAVSO's strict quality control
measures. We will be glad to give you good raw data simply by requesting
it at http://www.aavso.org/adata/onlinedata/.
Specific questions about the data in the light curves can be sent to
aavso@aavso.org.
About Variable Stars
Variable stars are stars that change in
brightness. A light curve is a plot of a
variable star's brightness over time. By looking at a light curve you
can see how the star has behaved in the past and try to predict how it
will behave in the future. Astronomers also use this data to model
astrophysical processes in the star. This important to help us
understand how stars work.
The Data
Here is a summary of the various types of data available in the light
curves:
Visual Observation:
This is an observation of a variable star by an observer with a
regular telescope. It means that an observer saw the star at Y
brightness on X date and time.
Fainter than:
Sometimes the star is too faint to be seen by the observer. When that
happens, the observer reports the faintest star seen in the field.
These are called fainter thans
because the variable star
was fainter than the brightness reported.
Average:
This is a computed running average of all the data reported. The
bin number tells the computer how many days to
use in each average calculation. This will need to be adjusted based on
the frequency of observations. The error bars represent the 1 sigma
standard deviation of error.
CCDV:
These are observations reported using a CCD with a
Johnson V filter. CCDV observations
tend to be more accurate than visual (but not
always).
CCDB:
CCD observations with a Johnson B
filter.
CCDI:
CCD observations with a Cousins Ic
filter.
CCDR:
CCD observations with a Cousins R
filter.
Discrepant Data:
This is data that has been flagged by an AAVSO staff
member as being discrepant following HQ rules for
data validation. Contact aavso@aavso.org for more
information.
Dates:
The observational database the light curves are based on is updated
every 10 minutes so you can get data in near real-time. Right now
light curve data is only available back to 1961, but this will likely
be expanded further back in time in the future.
Updating your local copy of Variable Stars
The AAVSO publishes the
full list of variable
stars in their monitoring program. This file is updated
monthly with newly discovered variable stars. To sync the list that
&kstars; uses with the AAVSO master list, click
on the Update List button in the
AAVSO dialog. &kstars; will then attempt to
connect to the AAVSO database and download the
latest list.
The customized data stream provided by the AAVSO was implemented for
&kstars; by Aaron Price. Thank you, Aaron!