Time-resolved spectroscopy of the planet-hosting sdB pulsator V391 Pegasi
S. Schuh, R. Kruspe, R. Lutz, R. Silvotti

TL;DR
This study investigates the pulsation modes and potential planetary companion of the sdB star V391 Pegasi through time-resolved spectroscopy, aiming to determine the star's inclination and the companion's mass.
Contribution
It provides limits on pulsational radial velocities of V391 Pegasi using high-resolution spectra, aiding in understanding the star's inclination and the planetary companion.
Findings
Limits on pulsational radial velocities established
Spectroscopic data obtained from HET and Keck telescopes
Method to infer orbital inclination from stellar rotation proposed
Abstract
The subdwarf B (sdB) star V391 Peg oscillates in short-period p modes and long-period g modes, making it one of the three known hybrids among sdBs. As a by-product of the effort to measure secular period changes in the p modes due to evolutionary effects on a time scale of almost a decade, the O-C diagram has revealed an additional sinusoidal component attributed to a periodic shift in the light travel time caused by a planetary-mass companion around the sdB star in a 3.2 yr orbit. In order to derive the mass of the companion object, it is necessary to determine the orbital inclination. One promising possibility to do this is to use the stellar inclination as a primer for the orbital orientation. The stellar inclination can refer to the rotational or the pulsational axis, which are assumed to be aligned, and can in turn then be derived by combining measurements of v_(rot) and v_(rot)sin…
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