Pulsations in the atmosphere of the rapidly oscillating Ap star 10 Aquilae
M. Sachkov, O. Kochukhov, T. Ryabchikova, D. Huber, F. Leone, S., Bagnulo, W.W. Weiss

TL;DR
This study investigates the vertical pulsation structure of the peculiar roAp star 10 Aql using high-resolution spectroscopy, revealing unique pulsation features and wave propagation characteristics across different atmospheric layers.
Contribution
First detailed vertical pulsation mode analysis in a multiperiodic roAp star, showing how pulsation amplitudes vary with atmospheric height and identifying a pulsation node.
Findings
Pulsation amplitudes increase with atmospheric height, reaching up to 350 m/s.
Detection of a pulsation node indicated by phase and amplitude changes.
Unique pulsation maximum in upper layers due to TbIII lines.
Abstract
The rapidly oscillating Ap (roAp) star 10 Aql shows one of the lowest photometric pulsation amplitudes and is characterized by an unusual spectroscopic pulsational behavior compared to other roAp stars. More than 1000 spectra were taken during 7 nights over a time span of 21 days with high-resolution spectrographs at the 8-m ESO VLT and 3.6-m TNG telescopes giving access to radial velocity variations of about 150 lines from different chemical species. A comparison of pulsation signatures in lines formed at different atmospheric heights allowed us to resolve the vertical structure of individual pulsation modes in 10 Aql which is the first time for a multiperiodic roAp star. The inferred propagation of pulsation waves in 10 Aql is qualitatively similar to other roAp stars: pulsation amplitudes become measurable in the layers where Y and Eu are concentrated, increase in layers where the…
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