Photometric variability of the Be star CoRoT-ID 102761769
M. Emilio, L. Andrade, E. Janot-Pacheco, A. Baglin, J., Guti\'errez-Soto, J.C. Su\'arez, B. de Batz, P. Diago, J. Fabregat, M., Floquet, Y. Fr\'emat, A.L. Huat, A.M. Hubert, F. Espinosa Lara, B. Leroy, C., Martayan, C. Neiner, T. Semaan, J. Suso

TL;DR
This study analyzes the photometric variability of the Be star CoRoT-ID 102761769 using space-based observations, identifying pulsation frequencies and estimating stellar rotation to understand the Be phenomenon.
Contribution
First detailed space-based variability analysis of a Be star outside Earth's atmosphere, identifying pulsation modes and estimating stellar rotation.
Findings
Detected two close pulsation frequencies at 2.465 and 2.441 c/d.
Estimated stellar rotation at 120 km/s, near critical velocity.
Confirmed pulsations are due to stellar oscillations, not rotation.
Abstract
Classical Be stars are rapid rotators of spectral type late O to early A and luminosity class V-III, wich exhibit Balmer emission lines and often a near infrared excess originating in an equatorially concentrated circumstellar envelope, both produced by sporadic mass ejection episodes. The causes of the abnormal mass loss (the so-called Be phenomenon) are as yet unknown. For the first time, we can now study in detail Be stars outside the Earth's atmosphere with sufficient temporal resolution. We investigate the variability of the Be Star CoRoT-ID 102761769 observed with the CoRoT satellite in the exoplanet field during the initial run. One low-resolution spectrum of the star was obtained with the INT telescope at the Observatorio del Roque de los Muchachos. A time series analysis was performed using both cleanest and singular spectrum analysis algorithms to the CoRoT light curve. To…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
