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The intrinsically faint M dwarfs are the most numerous stars in the Galaxy, have main-sequence lifetimes longer than the Hubble time, and host some of the most interesting planetary systems known to date. Their identification and classification throughout the Galaxy is crucial to unravel the processes involved in the formation of planets, stars and the Milky Way. The ESO Public Survey VVV is a deep near-IR survey mapping the Galactic bulge and southern plane. The VVV b201 tile, located in the border of the bulge, was specifically selected for the characterisation of M dwarfs. We used VISTA photometry to identify M dwarfs in the VVV b201 tile, to estimate their subtypes, and to search for transit-like light curves from the first 26 epochs of the survey. UKIDSS photometry from SDSS spectroscopically identified M dwarfs was used to calculate their expected colours in the $YJHK_s$ VISTA system. A colour-based spectral subtype calibration was computed. Possible giants were identified by a $(J-K_s, H_{J})$ reduced proper motion diagram. The light curves of 12.8<$K_s$<15.8 colour-selected M dwarfs were inspected for signals consistent with transiting objects. We identified 23,345 objects in VVV b201 with colours consistent with M dwarfs. We provided their spectral types and photometric distances, up to $sim$ 300 pc for M9s and $sim$ 1.2 kpc for M4s, from photometry. In the range 12<$K_s$<16, we identified 753 stars as possible giants out of 9,232 M dwarf candidates. While only the first 26 epochs of VVV were available, and 1 epoch was excluded, we were already able to identify transit-like signals in the light curves of 95 M dwarfs and of 12 possible giants. Thanks to its deeper photometry ($sim$4 magnitudes deeper than 2MASS), the VVV survey will be a major contributor to the discovery and study of M dwarfs and possible companions towards the center of the Milky Way.
The VISTA Variables in the Via Lactea (VVV) Survey is one of the six ESO public surveys currently ongoing at the VISTA telescope on Cerro Paranal, Chile. VVV uses near-IR ($ZYJHK_{rm s}$) filters that at present provide photometry to a depth of $K_{r
The Vista Variables in the Via Lactea survey (VVV) is a near-IR ESO public survey devoted to study the Galactic bulge and southern inner disk covering 560 deg$^2$ on the sky. This multi-epoch and multi-wavelength survey has helped to discover the fir
We present a flare rate analysis of 50,130 M dwarf light curves in SDSS Stripe 82. We identified 271 flares using a customized variability index to search ~2.5 million photometric observations for flux increases in the u- and g-bands. Every image of
Context. The Vista Variables in the Via Lactea (VVV) near-infrared variability survey explores some of the most complex regions of the Milky Way bulge and disk in terms of high extinction and high crowding. Aims. We add a new wavelength dimension to
Context. The Vista Variables in the Via Lactea (VVV) ESO Public Survey is a variability survey of the Milky Way bulge and an adjacent section of the disk carried out from 2010 on ESO Visible and Infrared Survey Telescope for Astronomy (VISTA). VVV wi