1 research outputs found
A Multi-Year Photopolarimetric Study of the Semi-Regular Variable V CVn and Identification of Analogue Sources
The semi-regular variable star V Canum Venaticorum (V CVn) is well-known for
its unusual linear polarization position angle (PA). Decades of observing V CVn
reveal a nearly constant PA spanning hundreds of pulsation cycles. This
phenomenon has persisted through variability that has ranged by 2 magnitudes in
optical brightness and through variability in the polarization amplitude over
0.3% and 6.9%. Additionally, the polarization fraction of V CVn varies
inversely with brightness.
This paper presents polarization measurements obtained over three pulsation
cycles. We find that the polarization maximum does not always occur precisely
at the same time as the brightness minimum. Instead, we observe a small lead or
lag in relation to the brightness minimum, spanning a period of a few days up
to three weeks. Furthermore, the PA sometimes exhibits a non-negligible
rotation, especially at lower polarization levels.
To elucidate the unusual optical behavior of V CVn, we present a list of
literature sources that also exhibit polarization variability with a roughly
fixed PA. We find this correlation occurs in stars with high tangential space
velocities, i.e., "runaway" stars, suggesting that the long-term constant PA is
related to how the circumstellar gas is shaped by the star's high-speed motion
through the interstellar medium.Comment: 9 pages + appendices, 7 figures, accepted for publication in A&