Analysis of Kepler B stars: rotational modulation and Maia variables
L. A. Balona, A. S. Baran, J. Daszynska-Daszkiewicz, P. De Cat

TL;DR
This study analyzes Kepler data of 115 B stars, revealing that many exhibit rotational modulation likely caused by star spots, and identifies several Maia and beta Cephei candidates, suggesting complex stellar behaviors and magnetic activity.
Contribution
First comprehensive analysis of Kepler B star light curves highlighting rotational modulation and identifying Maia and beta Cephei candidates.
Findings
39% of B stars show rotational modulation signatures.
Approximately 8% of stars have peculiar periodogram features linked to rotation.
Identified multiple Maia and beta Cephei variable candidates.
Abstract
We examine 4-yr almost continuous Kepler photometry of 115 B stars. We find that the light curves of 39 percent of these stars are simply described by a low-frequency sinusoid and its harmonic, usually with variable amplitudes, which we interpret as rotational modulation. A large fraction (28 percent) of B stars might be classified as ellipsoidal variables, but a statistical argument suggests that these are probably rotational variables as well. About 8 percent of the rotational variables have a peculiar periodogram feature which is common among A stars. The physical cause of this is very likely related to rotation. The presence of so many rotating variables indicates the presence of star spots. This suggests that magnetic fields are indeed generated in radiative stellar envelopes. We find five beta Cep variables, all of which have low frequencies with relatively large amplitudes. The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
