634 research outputs found
Search for binary central stars of the SMC PNe
The Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment (OGLE), originally designed to
search for microlensing events, provides a rich and uniform data set suitable
for studying the variability of certain types of objects. We used the OGLE data
to study the photometry of central stars of planetary nebulae (PNe) in the
Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC). In particular, we searched for close binary
central stars with the aim to constrain the binary fraction and period
distribution in the SMC. We also searched for PNe mimics and removed them from
the PNe sample. We identified 52 counterparts of PNe in the SMC in the I-band
images from the OGLE-II and OGLE-III surveys. We analysed the time-series
photometry of the PNe. Spectra of the photometric variables were obtained to
constrain the nature of the objects or search for additional evidence for
binarity. Eight variables were found. Of these, seven objects are PNe mimics,
including one symbiotic star candidate. One close binary central star of PN
with a period of 1.15 or 2.31 day was discovered. The obtained binary fraction
for the SMC PNe and the observational biases are discussed in terms of the OGLE
observations.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. 7 pages and 7 figures, table 4 is
only available at the CD
Acoustic oscillations in stars near the tip of the red giant branch
Small amplitude oscillations are observed in red giant branch (RGB) stars.
Data on such oscillations are a source of information about the objects,
notably about properties of convection in their envelopes and about the systems
these objects inhabit. The OGLE-III catalog contains data for about 80 thousand
small amplitude variable red giants (OSARGs) in the Large Magellanic Cloud.
We want to explain variability in OSARGs as the solar-like oscillation and to
associate the peaks in power spectra with frequencies of acoustic modes. We use
data on reddening-free magnitudes of the objects and interpret them in terms of
stellar physical parameters using tabulated isochrones calculated for ages and
composition parameters corresponding to the upper RGB of the LMC. Massive data
on the peak frequencies and amplitudes are compared with expectations for
stochastically excited oscillations. The frequencies are also compared with
those calculated for radial modes in envelope models with parameters taken from
the isochrones.
In stars close to the tip of the RGB, the peaks in power spectra are found in
the 0.1-1.0 Hz range, which is consistent with extrapolation of the
frequency-luminosity relation for the solar-like oscillation. The dominant
peaks occur close to the first two radial overtones. The increase in amplitude
with luminosity is slower than linear. The exponent s=0.9 is similar to what is
found from recent analysis of CoRoT data on less luminous red giants. Frequency
separations between dominant peaks are found to be smaller by about 20% than
calculated separations between these modes. After examining various
possibilities, we left this discrepancy unexplained.
The small amplitude variability of stars at the RGB tip is likely to be
caused by a stochastic excitation of acoustic oscillations, but interpreting of
individual peaks in power spectra presents a problem.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics, 6 pages, 6
figure
Photometry of two unusual A supergiant systems in the Small Magellanic Cloud
We present multiwavelength broadband photometry and V, I time resolved
photometry for two variable bright stars in the SMC, OGLE004336.91-732637.7
(SMC-SC3) and OGLE004633.76-731204.3 (SMC-SC4). The light curves span 12 years
and show long-term periodicities (SMC-SC3) and modulated eclipses (SMC-SC4)
that are discussed in terms of wide-orbit intermediate mass interacting
binaries and associated envelopes. SMC-SC3 shows a primary period of 238.1 days
along with a complicated waveform suggesting ellipsoidal variablity influenced
by an eccentric orbit. This star also shows a secondary variability with an
unstable periodicity that has a mean value of 15.3 days. We suggest this could
be associated with nonradial pulsations.Comment: To be published in Publications of the Astronomical Society of the
Pacific (PASP)
Multi-Periodic Oscillations in Cepheids and RR Lyrae-Type Stars
Classical Cepheids and RR Lyrae-type stars are usually considered to be
textbook examples of purely radial, strictly periodic pulsators. Not all the
variables, however, conform to this simple picture. In this review I discuss
different forms of multi-periodicity observed in Cepheids and RR Lyrae stars,
including Blazhko effect and various types of radial and nonradial multi-mode
oscillations.Comment: Proceedings of the 20th Stellar Pulsation Conference Series: "Impact
of new instrumentation & new insights in stellar pulsations", 5-9 September
2011, Granada, Spai
The VMC survey - XX. Identification of new Cepheids in the Small Magellanic Cloud
This article has been accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © : 2016 M. I. Moretti, et al., Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.We present Ks-band light curves for 299 Cepheids in the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) of which 288 are new discoveries that we have identified using multi-epoch near-infrared photometry obtained by the VISTA survey of the Magellanic Clouds system (VMC). The new Cepheids have periods in the range from 0.34 to 9.1 d and cover the magnitude interval 12.9 = ăKsă = 17.6 mag. Our method was developed using variable stars previously identified by the optical microlensing survey OGLE.We focus on searching newCepheids in external regions of the SMC for which complete VMC Ks-band observations are available and no comprehensive identification of different types of variable stars from other surveys exists yet.Peer reviewe
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