The helium-rich hot subdwarf LS IV -14 116 shows remarkably high surface
abundances of zirconium, yttrium, strontium, and germanium, indicative of
strong chemical stratification in the photosphere. It also shows photometric
behaviour indicative of non-radial g-mode pulsations, despite having surface
properties inconsistent with any known pulsational instability zone. We have
conducted a search for radial velocity variability. This has demonstrated that
at least one photometric period is observable in several absorption lines as a
radial velocity variation with a semi-amplitude in excess of 5 km s−1. A
correlation between line strength and pulsation amplitude provides evidence
that the photosphere pulsates differentially. The ratio of light to velocity
amplitude is too small to permit the largest amplitude oscillation to be
radial.Comment: To appear in MNRAS: Accepted 2014 October 20, 6 pages, 2 table, 8
figure