Diverse Variability of O and B Stars Revealed from 2-minute Cadence Light Curves in Sectors 1 and 2 of the TESS Mission: Selection of an Asteroseismic Sample
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Pedersen, May G.; Chowdhury, Sowgata; Johnston, Cole; Bowman, Dominic M.; Aerts, Conny; Handler, Gerald; De Cat, Peter; Neiner, Coralie; David-Uraz, Alexandre; Buzasi, Derek; Tkatchenko, Andrew; Simón-Díaz, Sergio; Moravveji, Ehsan; Sikora, James; Mirouh, Giovanni Marcello; Lovekin, Catherine C.; Cantiello, Matteo; Daszyńska-Daszkiewicz, Jadwiga; Pigulski, Andrzej; Vanderspek, Roland K.; Ricker, George R.Editorial
IOP Publishing
Materia
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics asteroseismology binaries: general stars: evolution stars: massive stars: oscillations: including pulsations stars: rotation
Fecha
2019-02-08Referencia bibliográfica
Pedersen, M. G. et al. “Diverse Variability of O and B Stars Revealed from 2-minute Cadence Light Curves in Sectors 1 and 2 of the TESS Mission: Selection of an Asteroseismic Sample”. The Astrophysical Journal, vol. 872, no. 1, Art. no. L9, IOP, 2019. doi:10.3847/2041-8213/ab01e1
Patrocinador
NASA contract NAS5-2655; European Research Council (ERC)/European Union’s Horizon 2020 (670519: MAMSIE); Research Foundation Flanders (FWO) G0H5416N; STFC consolidated ST/R000603/1; Polish NCN (2015/17/B/ST9/02082, 2015/18/A/ST9/00578, 2016/21/B/ST9/01126); Natural Science and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) of Canada; Simons Foundation; Instituut voor Sterrenkunde, BelgiumResumen
Uncertainties in stellar structure and evolution theory are largest for stars undergoing core convection on the main sequence. A powerful way to calibrate the free parameters used in the theory of stellar interiors is asteroseismology, which provides direct measurements of angular momentum and element transport. We report the detection and classification of new variable O and B stars using high-precision short-cadence (2 minutes) photometric observations assembled by the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS). In our sample of 154 O and B stars, we detect a high percentage (90%) of variability. Among these we find 23 multiperiodic pulsators, 6 eclipsing binaries, 21 rotational variables, and 25 stars with stochastic low-frequency variability. Several additional variables overlap between these categories. Our study of O and B stars not only demonstrates the high data quality achieved by TESS for optimal studies of the variability of the most massive stars in the universe, but also represents the first step toward the selection and composition of a large sample of O and B pulsators with high potential for joint asteroseismic and spectroscopic modeling of their interior structure with unprecedented precision.





