The first evidence for multiple pulsation axes: a new roAp star in the Kepler field, KIC 10195926
D.W. Kurtz, M.S. Cunha, H. Saio, L. Bigot, L. A. Balona, V.G. Elkin,, H. Shibahashi, I.M. Brandao, K. Uytterhoeven, S. Frandsen, S. Frimann, A., Hatzes, T. Lueftinger, M. Gruberbauer, H. Kjeldsen, J. Christensen-Dalsgaard,, S.D. Kawaler

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a new roAp star with two pulsation modes having different axes, providing the first evidence of multiple pulsation axes in a pulsating star, and suggests the presence of torsional modes.
Contribution
It introduces the first observational evidence for separate pulsation axes in different modes of a pulsating star, expanding understanding of stellar pulsation geometry.
Findings
Discovered a roAp star with two distinct pulsation axes.
Identified two pulsation modes with different geometries.
Proposed the first observational evidence of torsional modes in an roAp star.
Abstract
We have discovered a new rapidly oscillating Ap star among the Kepler Mission target stars, KIC 10195926. This star shows two pulsation modes with periods that are amongst the longest known for roAp stars at 17.1 min and 18.1 min, indicating that the star is near the terminal age main sequence. The principal pulsation mode is an oblique dipole mode that shows a rotationally split frequency septuplet that provides information on the geometry of the mode. The secondary mode also appears to be a dipole mode with a rotationally split triplet, but we are able to show within the improved oblique pulsator model that these two modes cannot have the same axis of pulsation. This is the first time for any pulsating star that evidence has been found for separate pulsation axes for different modes. The two modes are separated in frequency by 55 microHz, which we model as the large separation. The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
