5414463; The small heat rate "bump" you are experiencing comes from the compressor. Compressors really are constant speed devices, with modifications to help efficiency at off-design operating points. Any compressor has an efficiency "sweet spot", where they operate at peak. This point, if you have access to a compressor map from the OEM, can be identified at a specific speed, compression ratio, and mass flow, biased somewhat by ambient conditions. (Temperature, barometric pressure, inlet losses.) To help with off design points, the manufacturer added variable incidence stator vanes to help the LP section of the compressor cope with the limited flow capacity of the HP stages. Once the compressor is up to full speed, the variable stators are fixed on the open-travel stops, and the compressor then operates as a constant speed device. When operating the unit at low outputs/speeds, even though the variable stators are performing their function, the point in the compressor with the first row of fixed stators is not in an aerodynamic efficient condition. (The main reason fatigue failures occur at this point in the compressor.) At certain ambient conditions, i.e. hotter than ISO conditions, the inlet air is less dense, thus the LP stages of the compressor will deliver less mass net flow to the first row of fixed stators, putting them into a slightly more aerodynamic efficient profile. In effect, the warmer, less dense inlet air is helping to cover up a bad operating area in the compressor map.
In an ideal world, axial flow compressors would have variable stators on every stage, or each disk running at a different speed. Neither are practical! Compressors as a whole are the same as a single airfoil, most efficient at one speed, mass flow. The small heat rate bump you are observing, is a small anomaly, effecting the compressor in a good way. Hope this helps.
j79guy