78 research outputs found
Short-term variability and mass loss in Be stars II. Physical taxonomy of photometric variability observed by the Kepler spacecraft
Context: [abbreviated]
Aims: Kepler data of three known Be stars are re-visited to establish their
pulsational nature and assess the properties of additional, non-pulsational
variations. The three program stars turned out to be one inactive Be star, one
active, continuously outbursting Be star, and one Be star transiting from a
non-outbursting into an outbursting phase, thus forming an excellent sample to
distill properties of Be stars in the various phases of their life-cycle.
Methods: [abbreviated]
Results: The short-term photometric variability of Be stars must be
disentangled into a stellar and a circumstellar part. The stellar part is on
the whole not different from what is seen in non-Be stars. However, some of the
observed phenomena might be to be due to resonant mode coupling, a mechanism
not typically considered for B-type stars. Short-term circumstellar variability
comes in the form of either a group of relatively well-defined, short-lived
frequencies during outbursts, which are called \v{S}tefl frequencies, and broad
bumps in the power spectra, indicating aperiodic variability on a time scale
similar to typical low-order -mode pulsation frequencies, rather than true
periodicity.
Conclusions: From a stellar pulsation perspective, Be stars are rapidly
rotating SPB stars, that is they pulsate in low order -modes, even if the
rapid rotation can project the observed frequencies into the traditional
high-order -mode regime above about 4 c/d. However, when a circumstellar
disk is present, Be star power spectra are complicated by both cyclic, or
periodic, and aperiodic circumstellar phenomena, possibly even dominating the
power spectrum.Comment: Accepted by Astronomy and Astrophysic
Long Baseline Interferometry of Be Stars
We give an introduction to interferometrical concepts and their applicability
to Be stars. The first part of the paper concentrates on a short historic
overview and basic principles of two-beam interferometric observations. In the
second part, the VLTI/MIDI instrument is introduced and its first results on Be
stars, obtained on alpha Ara and delta Cen, are outlined.Comment: To appear in proceedings of the Astronomische Gesellshaft meeting,
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The resonant B1II+B1II binary BI108
BI108 is a luminous variable star in the Large Magellanic Cloud classified
B1II. The variability consists of two resonant periods (3:2), of which only one
is orbital, however. We discuss possible mechanisms responsible for the second
period and its resonant locking.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure, IAUS 272 - Active OB Stars: Structure, Evolution,
Mass Loss and Critical Limit
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