Discovery of starspots on Vega. First spectroscopic detection of surface structures on a normal A-type star
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Böhm, Torsten; Holschneider, Matthias; Lignières, François; Petit, Pascal; Rainer, Monica; Paletou, Frédéric; Wade, Gregg; Alecian, Evelyne; Carfantan, Hervé; Blazère, Aurore; Mirouh, Giovanni MarcelloEditorial
EDP Sciences
Materia
starspots stars: early-type stars: rotation stars: oscillations stars: individual: Vega asteroseismology Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics
Fecha
2015-03-20Referencia bibliográfica
Böhm, T. et al., “Discovery of starspots on Vega. First spectroscopic detection of surface structures on a normal A-type star”, Astronomy and Astrophysics, vol. 577, Art. no. A64, 2015. doi:10.1051/0004-6361/201425425.
Patrocinador
Université de Toulouse, UPS-OMP, IRAP, Toulouse, France ; CNRS; IRAP, 14 avenue Édouard Belin, 31400, Toulouse, FranceResumen
Context. The theoretically studied impact of rapid rotation on stellar evolution needs to be compared with these results of high-resolution spectroscopy-velocimetry observations. Early-type stars present a perfect laboratory for these studies. The prototype A0 star Vega has been extensively monitored in recent years in spectropolarimetry. A weak surface magnetic field was detected, implying that there might be a (still undetected) structured surface. First indications of the presence of small amplitude stellar radial velocity variations have been reported recently, but the confirmation and in-depth study with the highly stabilized spectrograph SOPHIE/OHP was required.
Aims: The goal of this article is to present a thorough analysis of the line profile variations and associated estimators in the early-type standard star Vega (A0) in order to reveal potential activity tracers, exoplanet companions, and stellar oscillations.
Methods: Vega was monitored in quasi-continuous high-resolution echelle spectroscopy with the highly stabilized velocimeter SOPHIE/OHP. A total of 2588 high signal-to-noise spectra was obtained during 34.7 h on five nights (2 to 6 of August 2012) in high-resolution mode at R = 75 000 and covering the visible domain from 3895-6270 Å. For each reduced spectrum, least square deconvolved equivalent photospheric profiles were calculated with a Teff = 9500 and log g = 4.0 spectral line mask. Several methods were applied to study the dynamic behaviour of the profile variations (evolution of radial velocity, bisectors, vspan, 2D profiles, amongst others).
Results: We present the discovery of a spotted stellar surface on an A-type standard star (Vega) with very faint spot amplitudes ΔF/Fc ~ 5 × 10-4. A rotational modulation of spectral lines with a period of rotation P = 0.68 d has clearly been exhibited, unambiguously confirming the results of previous spectropolarimetric studies. Most of these brightness inhomogeneities seem to be located in lower equatorial latitudes. Either a very thin convective layer can be responsible for magnetic field generation at small amplitudes, or a new mechanism has to be invoked to explain the existence of activity tracing starspots. At this stage it is difficult to disentangle a rotational from a stellar pulsational origin for the existing higher frequency periodic variations.
Conclusions: This first strong evidence that standard A-type stars can show surface structures opens a new field of research and ask about a potential link with the recently discovered weak magnetic field discoveries in this category of stars.





