# A revisit to the enigmatic variable star 21 Comae

**Authors:** Ernst Paunzen, Gerald Handler, Przemyslaw Walczak, Stefan Huemmerich,, Ewa Niemczura, Thomas Kallinger, Werner Weiss, Klaus Bernhard, Miroslav, Fedurco, Anna Guetl-Wallner, Jaymie Matthews, Theodor Pribulla, Martin Vanko,, Stefan Wallner, Tomasz Rozanski

arXiv: 1904.04809 · 2019-04-10

## TL;DR

This study re-examines the variable star 21 Com using advanced photometry and spectroscopy, confirming its classification as a CP2 star with rotational variability and no evidence of short-term pulsations, resolving previous contradictory findings.

## Contribution

It provides a comprehensive analysis combining space-based and ground-based data, clarifying the star's variability nature and dismissing earlier claims of short-term pulsations.

## Key findings

- 21 Com shows rotational variability with a 2.05219-day period.
- No significant short-term pulsations were detected in the 5-399 c/d range.
- The star is a main sequence CP2 star with specific physical parameters.

## Abstract

The magnetic chemically peculiar (Ap/CP2) star 21 Com has been extensively studied in the past, albeit with widely differing and sometimes contradictory results, in particular concerning the occurrence of short term variability between about 5 to 90 minutes. We have performed a new investigation of 21 Com using MOST satellite and high-cadence ground-based photometry, time series spectroscopy, and evolutionary and pulsational modeling. Our analysis confirms that 21 Com is a classical CP2 star showing increased abundances of, in particular, Cr and Sr. From spectroscopic analysis, we have derived Teff = 8900(200) K, log g = 3.9(2), and vsini = 63(2) km/s. Our modeling efforts suggest that 21 Com is a main sequence (MS) star seen equator-on with a mass of 2.29(10) M(Sun) and a radius of R = 2.6(2) R(Sun). Our extensive photometric data confirm the existence of rotational light variability with a period of 2.05219(2) d. However, no significant frequencies with a semi-amplitude exceeding 0.2 mmag were found in the frequency range from 5 to 399 c/d. Our RV data also do not indicate short-term variability. We calculated pulsational models assuming different metallicities and ages, which do not predict the occurrence of unstable modes. The star 18 Com, often employed as comparison star for 21 Com in the past, has been identified as a periodic variable (P = 1.41645 d). While it is impossible to assess whether 21 Com has exhibited short-term variability in the past, the new observational data and several issues/inconsistencies identified in previous studies strongly suggest that 21 Com is neither a delta Scuti nor a roAp pulsator but a "well-behaved" CP2 star exhibiting its trademark rotational variability.

## Full text

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## Figures

18 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1904.04809/full.md

## References

105 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1904.04809/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1904.04809