125 research outputs found
Asteroseismology with the WIRE satellite
I give a summary of results from the WIRE satellite, which has been used to
observe bright stars from 1999-2000 and 2003-2006. The WIRE targets are
monitored for up to five weeks with a duty cycle of 30-40%. The aim has been to
characterize the flux variation of stars across the Hertzsprung-Russell
diagram. I present an overview of the results for solar-like stars, delta Scuti
stars, giant stars, and eclipsing binaries.Comment: Accepted for publication in CoAst. Proceedings of the Vienna Workshop
on the Future of Asteroseismology (September 2006). 8 pages, 2 figure
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Infrared Polarimetry Of Very Young Objects Including Becklin-Neugebauer Source
NSFAstronom
Evidence of resonant mode coupling and the relationship between low and high frequencies in a rapidly rotating A star
In the theory of resonant mode coupling, the parent and child modes are
directly related in frequency and phase. The oscillations present in the fast
rotating Delta Scuti star KIC 8054146 allow us to test the most general and
generic aspects of such a theory. The only direct way to separate the parent
and coupled (child) modes is to examine the correlations in amplitude
variability between the different frequencies. For the dominant family of
related frequencies, only a single mode and a triplet are the origins of nine
dominant frequency peaks ranging from 2.93 to 66.30 cycles per day (as well as
dozens of small-amplitude combination modes and a predicted and detected third
high-frequency triplet). The mode-coupling model correctly predicts the large
amplitude variations of the coupled modes as a product of the amplitudes of the
parent modes, while the phase changes are also correctly modeled. This differs
from the behavior of 'normal' combination frequencies in that the amplitudes
are three orders of magnitude larger and may exceed even the amplitudes of the
parent modes. We show that two dominant low frequencies at 5.86 and 2.93 cycles
per day in the gravity-mode region are not harmonics of each other, and their
properties follow those of the almost equidistant high-frequency triplet. We
note that the previously puzzling situation of finding two strong peaks in the
low-frequency region related by nearly a factor of two in frequency has been
seen in other Delta Scuti stars as well.Comment: To be published in the Astrophysical Journa
Observations of pulsations in roAp stars
I review recent results of the observations of magnetoacoustic p-mode
oscillations in roAp stars with the focus on time-resolved spectroscopic
studies. Time-series spectroscopy of roAp stars reveals unexpected and diverse
pulsational behaviour in the spectral lines of different chemical elements.
These unique pulsational characteristics arise from an interplay between short
vertical length of pulsation waves and extreme chemical stratification in the
atmospheres of peculiar stars. This enables a tomographic reconstruction of the
depth-dependence of chemical composition and pulsation wave properties.
Combination of magnetoacoustic tomography with the Doppler imaging of the
horizontal non-radial pulsation pattern opens possibility for an unprecedented
three-dimensional mapping of roAp atmospheres.Comment: To appear in the proceedings of Vienna Workshop on the Future of
Asteroseismology, eds. G. Handler and G. Houdek, Comm. in Asteroseismolog
Theory of rapidly oscillating Ap stars
I review recent theoretical work on rapidly oscillating Ap stars and discuss
key aspects of the physics of the oscillations observed in this class of
pulsators.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in CoAs
The Future of Computational Asteroseismology
The history of stellar seismology suggests that observation and theory often
take turns advancing our understanding. The recent tripling of the sample of
pulsating white dwarfs generated by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey represents a
giant leap on the observational side. The time is ripe for a comparable advance
on the theoretical side. There are basically two ways we can improve our
theoretical understanding of pulsating stars: we can improve the fundamental
ingredients of the models, or we can explore the existing models in greater
computational detail. For pulsating white dwarfs, much progress has recently
been made on both fronts: models now exist that connect the interior structure
to its complete evolutionary history, while a method of using parallel
computers for global exploration of relatively simple models has also been
developed. Future advances in theoretical white dwarf asteroseismology will
emerge by combining these two approaches, yielding unprecedented insight into
the physics of diffusion, nuclear burning, and mixing.Comment: 8 pages, 1 fig, Communications in Asteroseismology (invited review
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