Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Hauptverfasser: Mitchell, Morgan A., Chote, Paul, McCormac, James, Pollacco, Don, Apergis, Ioannis, Lyman, J. D., Lockley, Isobel S., Gill, Samuel, Blake, James A., Claringbold, Alastair B., Steeghs, D. T. H., Casares, J.
Format: Preprint
Veröffentlicht: 2025
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:https://arxiv.org/abs/2511.19190
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
_version_ 1866918216511520768
author Mitchell, Morgan A.
Chote, Paul
McCormac, James
Pollacco, Don
Apergis, Ioannis
Lyman, J. D.
Lockley, Isobel S.
Gill, Samuel
Blake, James A.
Claringbold, Alastair B.
Steeghs, D. T. H.
Casares, J.
author_facet Mitchell, Morgan A.
Chote, Paul
McCormac, James
Pollacco, Don
Apergis, Ioannis
Lyman, J. D.
Lockley, Isobel S.
Gill, Samuel
Blake, James A.
Claringbold, Alastair B.
Steeghs, D. T. H.
Casares, J.
contents We present the commissioning results and first scientific observations from the newly installed TWIST observatory - a 50 cm telescope equipped with an sCMOS camera providing a $36.1\times24.1$ arcmin$^2$ field of view - housed in the former SuperWASP-North enclosure. We conducted a 67-night, 199-day baseline white-light monitoring campaign centred on the globular cluster M3 aimed at characterizing stellar variability within the cluster while also assessing the photometric performance of the newly commissioned system. We report the discovery of four new SX Phoenicis variables (V301-304), confirm their cluster membership, and identify fundamental-mode pulsation in one, allowing an independent period-luminosity-based distance estimate to M3. We revisited 231 previously known RR Lyrae stars, providing updated period measurements for 203 and white-light amplitudes for 198. We detected Blazhko-like modulation in 53 stars and characterized the modulation parameters for 28. Notably, we measure periods and amplitudes for the unclassified variables V286 and V287 for the first time. We also identify three foreground flaring M dwarfs, and assess the feasibility of detecting microlensing events in M3, concluding that expected rates are negligible. Alongside the scientific results, we introduce a new correction technique for flat-field images affected by scattered light and present a full characterization of the observatory's photometric capabilities. These results demonstrate the scientific utility of TWIST for high-cadence time-domain surveys using modest-aperture instrumentation.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2511_19190
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle A search for photometric variability towards the globular cluster M3 with the TWenty Inch Survey Telescope
Mitchell, Morgan A.
Chote, Paul
McCormac, James
Pollacco, Don
Apergis, Ioannis
Lyman, J. D.
Lockley, Isobel S.
Gill, Samuel
Blake, James A.
Claringbold, Alastair B.
Steeghs, D. T. H.
Casares, J.
Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics
Solar and Stellar Astrophysics
We present the commissioning results and first scientific observations from the newly installed TWIST observatory - a 50 cm telescope equipped with an sCMOS camera providing a $36.1\times24.1$ arcmin$^2$ field of view - housed in the former SuperWASP-North enclosure. We conducted a 67-night, 199-day baseline white-light monitoring campaign centred on the globular cluster M3 aimed at characterizing stellar variability within the cluster while also assessing the photometric performance of the newly commissioned system. We report the discovery of four new SX Phoenicis variables (V301-304), confirm their cluster membership, and identify fundamental-mode pulsation in one, allowing an independent period-luminosity-based distance estimate to M3. We revisited 231 previously known RR Lyrae stars, providing updated period measurements for 203 and white-light amplitudes for 198. We detected Blazhko-like modulation in 53 stars and characterized the modulation parameters for 28. Notably, we measure periods and amplitudes for the unclassified variables V286 and V287 for the first time. We also identify three foreground flaring M dwarfs, and assess the feasibility of detecting microlensing events in M3, concluding that expected rates are negligible. Alongside the scientific results, we introduce a new correction technique for flat-field images affected by scattered light and present a full characterization of the observatory's photometric capabilities. These results demonstrate the scientific utility of TWIST for high-cadence time-domain surveys using modest-aperture instrumentation.
title A search for photometric variability towards the globular cluster M3 with the TWenty Inch Survey Telescope
topic Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics
Solar and Stellar Astrophysics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2511.19190