Abstract

Abstract We explore methods for the identification of stellar flare events in irregularly sampled data of ground-based time domain surveys. In particular, we describe a new technique for identifying flaring stars, which we have implemented in a publicly available Python module called “PyVAN.” The approach uses the Differential Evolution algorithm to optimize parameters of empirically derived light curve templates for different types of stars to fit a candidate light curve. The difference of the likelihoods that these best-fit templates produced the observed data is then used to delineate targets that are well-explained by a flare template but simultaneously poorly explained by templates of common contaminants. By testing on light curves of known identity and morphology, we show that our technique is capable of recovering flaring status in 69% of all light curves containing a flare event above thresholds drawn to include <1% of any contaminant population. By applying to Palomar Transient Factory data, we show consistency with prior samples of flaring stars, and identify a small selection of candidate flaring G-type stars for possible follow-up.

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