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Published July 20, 2007 | Published
Journal Article Open

The Incidence of Dwarf Novae in Large Area Transient Searches

Abstract

Understanding and quantifying the contribution of known classes of transient and variable sources is an important lesson to be learned from the manifold of precursor programs of the near-future large synoptic sky survey programs such as SkyMapper, Pan-STARRS, and LSST. With this goal in mind, we undertook photometric and spectroscopic follow-up observations of four recently reported unidentified transients. For two sources, WFI J132813.7-214237 and WFI J161953.3+031909, we show that unfortunate coincidences led to their previous designation as transients. While the former is now interpreted as the spatial coincidence of a solar system object with a faint background star, the latter is merely a cataclysmic variable unfortunately caught in and out of eclipse. The third candidate, ROTSE3 J160213.1-021311.7, is identified as an SU UMa type dwarf nova with quiescent brightness of R ~ 22.7 and an outburst amplitude of ~5 mag. The fourth event, SDSS-SN 15207, similarly shows evidence for a dwarf nova origin. Our main conclusion is that cataclysmic variables in their various avatars will contribute moderately to the population of transient objects.

Additional Information

© 2007 The American Astronomical Society. Received 2006 October 12; accepted 2007 April 9. We acknowledge helpful discussions with J. Greiner, E. Mason, and L. Bildsten. We thank M. Sako and A. Becker for the timely alert about the eruption of SDSS-SN 15207. Furthermore, we thank the anonymous referee for constructive comments. This work is supported in part by grants from the National Science Foundation and NASA.

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August 22, 2023
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