The data mining III: An analysis of 21 eclipsing binary light-curves observed by the INTEGRAL/OMC Twenty-one eclipsing binaries were selected for an analysis from a hugedatabase of observations made by the INTEGRAL/OMC camera. Thephotometric data were processed and analyzed, resulting in a firstlight-curve study of these neglected eclipsing binaries. In severalsystems from this sample even their orbital periods have been confirmedor modified. Thirty-two new minima times of these binaries have beenderived.
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Times of Minima for Neglected Eclipsing Binaries in 2005 Times of minima obtained at Rolling Hills Observatory during 2005 for anumber of neglected eclipsing binaries are presented.
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New Elements for 80 Eclipsing Binaries This research presents new elements for 80 eclipsing binaries found withthe help of the ASAS-3, Hipparcos and TASS databases.
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New periodic variables from the Hipparcos epoch photometry Two selection statistics are used to extract new candidate periodicvariables from the epoch photometry of the Hipparcos catalogue. Theprimary selection criterion is a signal-to-noise ratio. The dependenceof this statistic on the number of observations is calibrated usingabout 30000 randomly permuted Hipparcos data sets. A significance levelof 0.1 per cent is used to extract a first batch of candidate variables.The second criterion requires that the optimal frequency be unaffectedif the data are de-trended by low-order polynomials. We find 2675 newcandidate periodic variables, of which the majority (2082) are from theHipparcos`unsolved' variables. Potential problems with theinterpretation of the data (e.g. aliasing) are discussed.
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The 74th Special Name-list of Variable Stars We present the Name-list introducing GCVS names for 3153 variable starsdiscovered by the Hipparcos mission.
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Dwarf K and M stars in the southern hemisphere. Abstract image available at:http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-bib_query?1972AJ.....77..486U&db_key=AST
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