2 research outputs found
Asteroseismology of massive stars with the TESS mission: the runaway Beta Cep pulsator PHL 346 = HN Aqr
We report an analysis of the first known Beta Cep pulsator observed by the
TESS mission, the runaway star PHL 346 = HN Aqr. The star, previously known as
a singly-periodic pulsator, has at least 34 oscillation modes excited, 12 of
those in the g-mode domain and 22 p modes. Analysis of archival data implies
that the amplitude and frequency of the dominant mode and the stellar radial
velocity were variable over time. A binary nature would be inconsistent with
the inferred ejection velocity from the Galactic disc of 420 km/s, which is too
large to be survivable by a runaway binary system. A kinematic analysis of the
star results in an age constraint (23 +- 1 Myr) that can be imposed on
asteroseismic modelling and that can be used to remove degeneracies in the
modelling process. Our attempts to match the excitation of the observed
frequency spectrum resulted in pulsation models that were too young. Hence,
asteroseismic studies of runaway pulsators can become vital not only in tracing
the evolutionary history of such objects, but to understand the interior
structure of massive stars in general. TESS is now opening up these stars for
detailed asteroseismic investigation.Comment: accepted for ApJ