69 research outputs found
A Quantitative Analysis of the Available Multicolor Photometry for Rapidly Pulsating Hot B Subdwarfs
We present a quantitative and homogeneous analysis of the broadband
multicolor photometric data sets gathered so far on rapidly pulsating hot B
subdwarf stars. This concerns seven distinct data sets related to six different
stars. Our analysis is carried out within the theoretical framework developed
by Randall et al., which includes full nonadiabatic effects. The goal of this
analysis is partial mode identification, i.e., the determination of the degree
index l of each of the observed pulsation modes. We assume possible values of l
from 0 to 5 in our calculations. For each target star, we compute a specific
model atmosphere and a specific pulsation model using estimates of the
atmospheric parameters coming from time-averaged optical spectroscopy. For
every assumed value of l, we use a formal chi-squared approach to model the
observed amplitude-wavelength distribution of each mode, and we compute a
quality-of-fit Q probability to quantify the derived fit and to discriminate
objectively between the various solutions. We find that no completely
convincing and unambiguous l identification is possible on the basis of the
available data, although partial mode discrimination has been reached for 25
out of the 41 modes studied. A brief statistical study of these results
suggests that a majority of the modes must have l values of 0, 1, and 2, but
also that modes with l = 4 could very well be present while modes with l = 3
appear to be rarer. This is in line with recent results showing that l = 4
modes in rapidly pulsating B subdwarfs have a higher visibility in the optical
domain than modes with l = 3. Although somewhat disappointing in terms of mode
discrimination, our results still suggest that the full potential of multicolor
photometry for l identification in pulsating subdwarfs is within reach.Comment: 59 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journal Supplement Serie
A photometric mode identification method, including an improved non-adiabatic treatment of the atmosphere
We present an improved version of the method of photometric mode
identification of Heynderickx et al. (1994). Our new version is based on the
inclusion of precise non-adiabatic eigenfunctions determined in the outer
stellar atmosphere according to the formalism recently proposed by Dupret et
al.(2002). Our improved photometric mode identification technique is therefore
no longer dependent on ad hoc parameters for the non-adiabatic effects. It
contains the complete physical conditions of the outer atmosphere of the star,
provided that rotation does not play a key role. We apply our improved method
to the two slowly pulsating B stars HD 74560 and HD 138764 and to the beta
Cephei star EN (16) Lac. Besides identifying the degree l of the pulsating
stars, our method is also a tool for improving the knowledge of stellar
interiors and atmospheres, by imposing constraints on parameters such as the
metallicity and the mixing-length parameter alpha (a procedure we label
non-adiabatic asteroseismology).Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures Accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
From the Heart of The Ghoul: C and N Abundances in the Corona of Algol B
Chandra Low Energy Transmission Grating Spectrograph observations of Algol
have been used to determine the abundances of C and N in the secondary star for
the first time. The analysis was performed relative to similar observations of
an adopted "standard" star HR 1099. It is demonstrated that HR 1099 and Algol
are coronal twins in many respects and that their X-ray spectra are very
similar in nearly all details, except for the observed strengths of C and N
lines. The H-like transitions of C and N in the coronae of Algol and HR 1099
demonstrate that the surface abundances of Algol B have been strongly modified
by CN-processing, as shown earlier by Schmitt & Ness (2002). It is found that N
is enhanced in Algol B by a factor of 3 compared to HR 1099. No C lines are
detected in the Algol spectrum, indicating a C depletion relative to HR 1099 by
a factor of 10 or more. These C and N abundances indicate that Algol B must
have lost at least half of its initial mass, and are consistent with
predictions of evolutionary models that include non-conservative mass transfer
and angular momentum loss through magnetic activity. Little or no dredge-up of
material subjected to CN-processing has occurred on the subgiant component of
HR 1099. It is concluded that Fe is very likely depleted in the coronae of both
Algol and HR 1099 relative to their photospheres by 0.5 dex, and C, N and O by
0.3 dex. Instead, Ne is enhanced by up to 0.5 dex.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figures, ApJ accepte
UVSat: a concept of an ultraviolet/optical photometric satellite
Time-series photometry from space in the ultraviolet can be presently done
with only a few platforms, none of which is able to provide wide-field
long-term high-cadence photometry. We present a concept of UVSat, a twin space
telescope which will be capable to perform this kind of photometry, filling an
observational niche. The satellite will host two telescopes, one for
observations in the ultraviolet, the other for observations in the optical
band. We also briefly show what science can be done with UVSat.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in the Proceedings of
the PAS (Proc. of the 2nd BRITE Science conference, Innsbruck
Massive pulsating stars observed by BRITE-Constellation. I. The triple system Beta Centauri (Agena)
This paper aims to precisely determine the masses and detect pulsation modes
in the two massive components of Beta Cen with BRITE-Constellation photometry.
In addition, seismic models for the components are considered and the effects
of fast rotation are discussed. This is done to test the limitations of seismic
modeling for this very difficult case. A simultaneous fit of visual and
spectroscopic orbits is used to self-consistently derive the orbital
parameters, and subsequently the masses, of the components. The derived masses
are equal to 12.02 +/- 0.13 and 10.58 +/- 0.18 M_Sun. The parameters of the
wider, A - B system, presently approaching periastron passage, are constrained.
Analysis of the combined blue- and red-filter BRITE-Constellation photometric
data of the system revealed the presence of 19 periodic terms, of which eight
are likely g modes, nine are p modes, and the remaining two are combination
terms. It cannot be excluded that one or two low-frequency terms are rotational
frequencies. It is possible that both components of Beta Cen are Beta Cep/SPB
hybrids. An attempt to use the apparent changes of frequency to distinguish
which modes originate in which component did not succeed, but there is
potential for using this method when more BRITE data become available. Agena
seems to be one of very few rapidly rotating massive objects with rich p- and
g-mode spectra, and precisely known masses. It can therefore be used to gain a
better understanding of the excitation of pulsations in relatively rapidly
rotating stars and their seismic modeling. Finally, this case illustrates the
potential of BRITE-Constellation data for the detection of rich-frequency
spectra of small-amplitude modes in massive pulsating stars.Comment: 17 pages (with Appendix), 15 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Testing magnetically confined wind shock models for Beta Cep using XMM-Newton and Chandra phase-resolved X-ray observations
(abridged) We have performed a set of phase-resolved X-ray observations of
the magnetic B star Beta Cep, for which theoretical models predict the presence
of a confined wind emitting X-rays from stationary shocks.
We obtained four observations spaced in rotational phase with XMM-Newton and
with Chandra. A detailed analysis of the data was performed to derive both
photometric and spectral parameters from the EPIC data, searching for
rotational modulation, and to derive the location of the X-ray plasma from the
line ratios in the He-like triplets of N, O and Ne from the RGS data. The LETG
data were used to constrain the presence of bulk motions in the plasma.
The strong rotational modulation predicted by the early, static magnetically
confined wind model for the X-ray emission is not observed in Beta Cep. The
small modulation present goes in the opposite direction, pointing to the
absence of any optically thick disk of neutral material, and showing a
modulation consistent with the later, dynamic models of magnetically confined
wind models in B stars. The lack of observed bulk motion points to the plasma
being confined by a magnetic field, but the low plasma temperature and lack of
any flaring show that the plasma is not heated by magnetic reconnection.
Therefore, the observations point to X-ray emission from shocks in a
magnetically confined wind, with no evidence of an optically thick, dense disk
at the magnetic equatorComment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic
Catalog of Galactic Beta Cephei Stars
We present an extensive and up-to-date catalog of Galactic Beta Cephei stars.
This catalog is intended to give a comprehensive overview of observational
characteristics of all known Beta Cephei stars. 93 stars could be confirmed to
be Beta Cephei stars. For some stars we re-analyzed published data or conducted
our own analyses. 61 stars were rejected from the final Beta Cephei list, and
77 stars are suspected to be Beta Cephei stars. A list of critically selected
pulsation frequencies for confirmed Beta Cephei stars is also presented. We
analyze the Beta Cephei stars as a group, such as the distributions of their
spectral types, projected rotational velocities, radial velocities, pulsation
periods, and Galactic coordinates. We confirm that the majority of these stars
are multiperiodic pulsators. We show that, besides two exceptions, the Beta
Cephei stars with high pulsation amplitudes are slow rotators. We construct a
theoretical HR diagram that suggests that almost all 93 Beta Cephei stars are
MS objects. We discuss the observational boundaries of Beta Cephei pulsation
and their physical parameters. We corroborate that the excited pulsation modes
are near to the radial fundamental mode in frequency and we show that the mass
distribution of the stars peaks at 12 solar masses. We point out that the
theoretical instability strip of the Beta Cephei stars is filled neither at the
cool nor at the hot end and attempt to explain this observation
Multisite spectroscopic seismic study of the beta Cep star V2052 Oph: inhibition of mixing by its magnetic field
We used extensive ground-based multisite and archival spectroscopy to derive
observational constraints for a seismic modelling of the magnetic beta Cep star
V2052 Ophiuchi. The line-profile variability is dominated by a radial mode
(f_1=7.14846 d^{-1}) and by rotational modulation (P_rot=3.638833 d). Two
non-radial low-amplitude modes (f_2=7.75603 d^{-1} and f_3=6.82308 d^{-1}) are
also detected. The four periodicities that we found are the same as the ones
discovered from a companion multisite photometric campaign (Handler et al.
2012) and known in the literature. Using the photometric constraints on the
degrees l of the pulsation modes, we show that both f_2 and f_3 are prograde
modes with (l,m)=(4,2) or (4,3). These results allowed us to deduce ranges for
the mass (M \in [8.2,9.6] M_o) and central hydrogen abundance (X_c \in
[0.25,0.32]) of V2052 Oph, to identify the radial orders n_1=1, n_2=-3 and
n_3=-2, and to derive an equatorial rotation velocity v_eq \in [71,75] km
s^{-1}. The model parameters are in full agreement with the effective
temperature and surface gravity deduced from spectroscopy. Only models with no
or mild core overshooting (alpha_ov \in [0,0.15] local pressure scale heights)
can account for the observed properties. Such a low overshooting is opposite to
our previous modelling results for the non-magnetic beta Cep star theta Oph
having very similar parameters, except for a slower surface rotation rate. We
discuss whether this result can be explained by the presence of a magnetic
field in V2052 Oph that inhibits mixing in its interior.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures and 5 tables; accepted for publication in MNRAS
on 2012 August 1
Interaction Between Convection and Pulsation
This article reviews our current understanding of modelling convection
dynamics in stars. Several semi-analytical time-dependent convection models
have been proposed for pulsating one-dimensional stellar structures with
different formulations for how the convective turbulent velocity field couples
with the global stellar oscillations. In this review we put emphasis on two,
widely used, time-dependent convection formulations for estimating pulsation
properties in one-dimensional stellar models. Applications to pulsating stars
are presented with results for oscillation properties, such as the effects of
convection dynamics on the oscillation frequencies, or the stability of
pulsation modes, in classical pulsators and in stars supporting solar-type
oscillations.Comment: Invited review article for Living Reviews in Solar Physics. 88 pages,
14 figure
Kelvin-Helmholtz instability in the presence of variable viscosity for mudflow resuspension in estuaries
The temporal stability of a parallel shear flow of miscible fluid layers of dif- ferent density and viscosity is investigated through a linear stability analysis and direct numerical simulations. The geometry and rheology of this Newto- nian fluid mixing can be viewed as a simplified model of the behavior of mud- flow at the bottom of estuaries for suspension studies. In this study, focus is on the stability and transition to turbulence of an initially laminar configuration. A parametric analysis is performed by varying the values of three control pa- rameters, namely the viscosity ratio, the Richardson and Reynolds numbers, in the case of initially identical thickness of the velocity, density and viscosity profiles. The range of parameters has been chosen so as to mimic a wide variety of real configurations. This study shows that the Kelvin-Helmholtz instability is controlled by the local Reynolds and Richardson numbers of the inflection point. In addition, at moderate Reynolds number, viscosity strat- ification has a strong influence on the onset of instability, the latter being enhanced at high viscosity ratio, while at high Reynolds number, the influ- ence is less pronounced. In all cases, we show that the thickness of the mixing layer (and thus resuspension) is increased by high viscosity stratification, in particular during the non-linear development of the instability and especially pairing processes. This study suggests that mud viscosity has to be taken into account for resuspension parameterizations because of its impact on the inflec- tion point Reynolds number and the viscosity ratio, which are key parameters for shear instabilities
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