1,655 research outputs found
Dipolar modes in luminous red giants
Lots of information on solar-like oscillations in red giants has been
obtained thanks to observations with CoRoT and Kepler space telescopes. Data on
dipolar modes appear most interesting. We study properties of dipolar
oscillations in luminous red giants to explain mechanism of mode trapping in
the convective envelope and to assess what may be learned from the new data.
Equations for adiabatic oscillations are solved by numerical integration down
to the bottom of convective envelope, where the boundary condition is applied.
The condition is based on asymptotic decomposition of the fourth order system
into components describing a running wave and a uniform shift of radiative
core. If the luminosity of a red giant is sufficiently high, for instance at M
= 2 Msun greater than about 100 Lsun, the dipolar modes become effectively
trapped in the acoustic cavity, which covers the outer part of convective
envelope. Energy loss caused by gravity wave emission at the envelope base is a
secondary or negligible source of damping. Frequencies are insensitive to
structure of the deep interior.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
Discovery of a new group of double-periodic RR Lyrae stars in the OGLE-IV photometry
We report the discovery of a new group of double-periodic RR Lyrae stars from
the analysis of the OGLE-IV Galactic bulge photometry. In 11 stars identified
in the OGLE catalog as first overtone pulsators (RRc stars) we detect
additional longer period variability of low amplitude, in the mmag regime. One
additional star of the same type is identified in a published analysis of the
Kepler space photometry. The period ratio between the shorter first overtone
period and a new, longer period lies in a narrow range around 0.686. Thus, the
additional period is longer than the expected period of the undetected radial
fundamental mode. The obvious conclusion that addition periodicity corresponds
to a gravity or a mixed mode faces difficulties, however.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter
Solar Magnetic Field Signatures in Helioseismic Splitting Coefficients
Normal modes of oscillation of the Sun are useful probes of the solar
interior. In this work, we use the even-order splitting coefficients to study
the evolution of magnetic fields in the convection zone over solar cycle 23,
assuming that the frequency splitting is only due to rotation and a large scale
magnetic field. We find that the data are best fit by a combination of a
poloidal field and a double-peaked near-surface toroidal field. The toroidal
fields are centered at r=0.999R_solar and r=0.996R_solar and are confined to
the near-surface layers. The poloidal field is a dipole field. The peak
strength of the poloidal field is 124 +/- 17G. The toroidal field peaks at 380
+/- 30G and 1.4 +/- 0.2kG for the shallower and deeper fields respectively. The
field strengths are highly correlated with surface activity. The toroidal field
strength shows a hysteresis-like effect when compared to the global 10.7 cm
radio flux. The poloidal field strength shows evidence of saturation at high
activity.Comment: 10 pages, accepted for publication in Ap
Probing the internal magnetic field of slowly pulsating B-stars through g modes
We suggest that high-order g modes can be used as a probe of the internal
magnetic field of SPB (slowly pulsating B) stars. The idea is based on earlier
work by the authors which analytically investigated the effect of a vertical
magnetic field on p and g modes in a plane-parallel isothermal stratified
atmosphere. It was found that even a weak field can significantly shift the
g-mode frequencies -- the effect increases with mode order. In the present
study we adopt the classical perturbative approach to estimate the internal
field of a 4 solar mass SPB star by looking at its effect on a low-degree
() and high-order () g mode with a period of about 1.5 d. We find
that a polar field strength of about 110 kG on the edge of the convective core
is required to produce a frequency shift of 1%. Frequency splittings of that
order have been observed in several SPB variables, in some cases clearly too
small to be ascribed to rotation. We suggest that they may be due to a poloidal
field with a strength of order 100 kG, buried in the deep interior of the star.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures (to appear in Astronomy & Astrophysics
Has a star enough energy to excite the thousand of modes observed with CoRoT?
The recent analyses of the light curves provided by CoRoT have revealed
pulsation spectra of unprecedented richness and precision, in particular,
thousands of pulsating modes, and a clear distribution of amplitudes with
frequency. In the community, some scientists have started doubting about the
validity of the classical tools to analyze these very accurate light curves.
This work provides the asteroseismic community with answers to this question
showing that (1) it is physically possible for a star to excite at a time and
with the observed amplitudes such a large number of modes; and (2) that the
kinetic energy accumulated in all those modes does not destroy the equilibrium
of the star. Consequently, mathematical tools presently applied in the analyses
of light curves can a priori be trusted. This conclusion is even more important
now, when a large amount of space data coming from Kepler are currently being
analyzed.
The power spectrum of different stellar cases, and the non-adiabatic code
GraCo have been used to estimate the upper limit of the energy per second
required to excite all the observed modes, and their total kinetic energy. A
necessary previous step for this study is to infer the relative radial
pulsational amplitude from the observed photometric amplitude, scaling our
linear pulsational solutions to absolute values. The derived upper limits for
the required pulsational energy were compared with 1) the luminosity of the
star; and 2) the gravitational energy. We obtained that both upper energy
limits are orders of magnitude smaller.Comment: 18 pages, 2 figures, accepted by ApJ Letters Dec 15, 200
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