480 research outputs found
Evidence for Granulation and Oscillations in Procyon from Photometry with the WIRE satellite
We report evidence for the granulation signal in the star Procyon A, based on
two photometric time series from the star tracker on the WIRE satellite. The
power spectra show evidence of excess power around 1 milliHz, consistent with
the detection of p-modes reported from radial velocity measurements. We see a
significant increase in the noise level below 3 milliHz, which we interpret as
the granulation signal. We have made a large set of numerical simulations to
constrain the amplitude and timescale of the granulation signal and the
amplitude of the oscillations. We find that the timescale for granulation is
T(gran) = 750(200) s, the granulation amplitude is 1.8(0.3) times solar, and
the amplitude of the p-modes is 8(3) ppm. We found the distribution of peak
heights in the observed power spectra to be consistent with that expected from
p-mode oscillations. However, the quality of the data is not sufficient to
measure the large separation or detect a comb-like structure, as seen in the
p-modes of the Sun. Comparison with the recent negative result from the MOST
satellite reveal that the MOST data must have an additional noise source that
prevented the detection of oscillations.Comment: 23 pages, 12 figures, submitted to ApJ; v2 revisions: one reference
corrected and a comment in Figure 7 correcte
Solar-like oscillations in the metal-poor subgiant nu Indi: II. Acoustic spectrum and mode lifetime
Convection in stars excites resonant acoustic waves which depend on the sound
speed inside the star, which in turn depends on properties of the stellar
interior. Therefore, asteroseismology is an unrivaled method to probe the
internal structure of a star. We made a seismic study of the metal-poor
subgiant star nu Indi with the goal of constraining its interior structure. Our
study is based on a time series of 1201 radial velocity measurements spread
over 14 nights obtained from two sites, Siding Spring Observatory in Australia
and ESO La Silla Observatory in Chile. The power spectrum of the high precision
velocity time series clearly presents several identifiable peaks between 200
and 500 uHz showing regularity with a large and small spacing of 25.14 +- 0.09
uHz and 2.96 +- 0.22 uHz at 330 uHz. Thirteen individual modes have been
identified with amplitudes in the range 53 to 173 cm/s. The mode damping time
is estimated to be about 16 days (1-sigma range between 9 and 50 days),
substantially longer than in other stars like the Sun, the alpha Cen system or
the giant xi Hya.Comment: 5 pages, 7 figures, A&A accepte
Mode switching in the nearby Mira-like variable R Doradus
We discuss visual observations spanning nearly 70 years of the nearby
semiregular variable R Doradus. Using wavelet analysis, we show that the star
switches back and forth between two pulsation modes having periods of 332 days
and about 175 days, the latter with much smaller amplitude. Comparison with
model calculations suggests that the two modes are the first and third radial
overtone, with the physical diameter of the star making fundamental mode
pulsation unlikely. The mode changes occur on a timescale of about 1000 d,
which is too rapid be related to a change in the overall thermal structure of
the star and may instead be related to weak chaos.
The Hipparcos distance to R Dor is 62.4 +/- 2.8 pc which, taken with its
dominant 332-day period, places it exactly on the period-luminosity relation of
Miras in the Large Magellanic Cloud. Our results imply first overtone pulsation
for all Miras which fall on the P-L relation. We argue that semiregular
variables with long periods may largely be a subset of Miras and should be
included in studies of Mira behaviour. The semiregulars may contain the
immediate evolutionary Mira progenitors, or stars may alternate between periods
of semiregular and Mira behaviour.Comment: 12 pages, latex with figures, accepted by MNRA
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