Mendel
Senior Member.
While this is technically true, it has no bearing on this paper, because it uses a data set that does not fit these criteria.The authors did exactly that: they tested every instrumental and astronomical explanation available to them, found most fit, and a few that didn't.
Article: Discovering vanishing objects in POSS I red images using the Virtual Observatory
Enrique Solano, B Villarroel, C Rodrigo
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 515, Issue 1, September 2022, Pages 1380–1391, https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stac1552
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Figure 9.
Spatial distribution in galactic coordinates of the final list of 5399 candidates (blue dots). A coloured POSS-II images is displayed in the background.
The paper applies "instrumental and astrological" criteria and ends up with " remaining unidentified transients (5399)". However, the paper never mentions damage from plate deformation.
I would comment on the uneven distribution of these points, but it doesn't actually matter here.
Article: Aligned, Multiple-transient Events in the First Palomar Sky Survey
Beatriz Villarroel, Enrique Solano, Hichem Guergouri, Alina Streblyanska, Stephen Bruehl, Vitaly M. Andruk, Lars Mattsson, Rudolf E. Bär, Jamal Mimouni, Stefan Geier
Published 2025 October 17
Citation Beatriz Villarroel et al 2025 PASP 137 104504 DOI 10.1088/1538-3873/ae0afe
We use the transient candidates from Solano et al. (2022), but with the additional requirement that they have no counterparts within 5″ in Gaia, Pan-STARRS and NeoWise. Furthermore, we restrict our analysis to objects in the northern hemisphere (decl. > 0°). This yields a sample of 106,339 transients, which we use for our study.
Elsewhere, the paper mentions 167 transients per plate, which confirms this number.
You'll notice that 106,339 far exceeds the 5399 data points that Solano(2022) arrived at by "testing every instrumental and astronomical explanation available to them" (but not including plate deformation defects). Because 106339 >> 5399, the data set in this paper includes over 100,000 points that have an "instrumental or astrological explanation".
Villarroel knows this, because she co-authored Solano(2022) and cites it here: "a set of ∼5000 short-lived POSS-I transients (Solano et al. 2022). This highly curated data set, in which diagnostics based on photometry and morphometric parameters have been carefully applied to the sample to reduce false positives (e.g., plate defects), suggests that the phenomenon of multiple transients can be found even when stringent diagnostic criteria are applied."
For reasons unknown to me, she opted not to use this curated data set for the IOPscience paper.