We have carried out an intensive survey of the northern region of the Fornax
dwarf spheroidal galaxy with the aim of detecting the galaxy's short--period
pulsating stars (P<0.25 days). Observations collected over three consecutive
nights with the Wide Field Imager of the 2.2m MPI telescope at ESO allowed us
to detect 85 high-amplitude (0.20-1.00 mag in B-light) variable stars with
periods in the range from 0.046 to 0.126 days, similar to SX Phoenicis stars in
Galactic metal-poor stellar populations. The plots of the observed periods vs.
the B and V magnitudes show a dispersion largely exceeding the observational
errors. To disentangle the matter, we separated the first-overtone from the
fundamental-mode pulsators and tentatively identified a group of subluminous
variables, about 0.35 mag fainter than the others. Their nature as either
metal-poor intermediate-age stars or stars formed by the merging of close
binary systems is discussed. The rich sample of the Fornax variables also led
us to reconstruct the Period-Luminosity relation for short-period pulsating
stars. An excellent linear fit, M(V)=-1.83(+/-0.08)-3.65(+/-0.07) log P(fund),
was obtained using 153 Delta Scuti and SX Phoenicis stars in a number of
different stellar systems.Comment: 11 pages plus 1 on-line figure and 1 on-line table; accepted for
publication in ApJ. Part of this work has been the subject of the Laurea
thesis of LDA. His supervisor and our colleague, Prof. Laura E. Pasinetti,
suddendly passed away on September 13, 2006. Several astronomers have been
trained under her tutelage and we gratefully honor her memor