WR 110: A Single Wolf-Rayet Star With Corotating Interaction Regions In Its Wind?
A.-N. Chen\'e (NRC/HIA, U. de Concepci\'on, U. de Valpara\'iso), A. F., J. Moffat (U. de Montr\'eal), C. Cameron (U. of British Columbia), R. Fahed, (U. de Montr\'eal), R. C. Gamen (U. Nacional de La Plata), L. Lef\`evre, (Observatoire Royal de Belgique)

TL;DR
This study uses space-based photometry to detect a 4.08-day periodicity in WR 110, suggesting the presence of corotating interaction regions in its wind, which may be common among WN stars and linked to stellar magnetism or pulsation.
Contribution
It provides the first evidence of CIRs in a single Wolf-Rayet star through high-precision space photometry, expanding understanding of WR star wind structures.
Findings
Detected a 4.08-day fundamental period in WR 110.
Identified harmonic and stochastic variability in the star's light curve.
Proposed the presence of corotating interaction regions as the cause.
Abstract
A 30-day contiguous photometric run with the MOST satellite on the WN5-6b star WR 110 (HD 165688) reveals a fundamental periodicity of P = 4.08 +/- 0.55 days along with a number of harmonics at periods P/n, with n ~ 2,3,4,5 and 6, and a few other possible stray periodicities and/or stochastic variability on timescales longer than about a day. Spectroscopic RV studies fail to reveal any plausible companion with a period in this range. Therefore, we conjecture that the observed light-curve cusps of amplitude ~ 0.01 mag that recur at a 4.08 day timescale may arise in the inner parts, or at the base of, a corotating interaction region (CIR) seen in emission as it rotates around with the star at constant angular velocity. The hard X-ray component seen in WR 110 could then be a result of a high velocity component of the CIR shock interacting with the ambient wind at several stellar radii.…
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