Confirmation of Monoperiodicity Above 20 Seconds for Two Blue Large-Amplitude Pulsators
Paul Ross McWhirter, Marco C. Lam, Iain A. Steele

TL;DR
This study confirms that two Blue Large-Amplitude Pulsators (BLAPs) exhibit only a single dominant pulsation period above 20 seconds, supporting their classification as monoperiodic variables.
Contribution
The paper provides high-cadence observations of two BLAPs, demonstrating their monoperiodic nature and setting constraints on additional short-period oscillations.
Findings
Primary periods of ~32 and 34 minutes identified.
No additional short-period variability detected down to 20 seconds.
BLAPs confirmed to be monoperiodic stars.
Abstract
Blue Large-Amplitude Pulsators (BLAPs) are a new class of pulsating variable star. They are located close to the hot subdwarf branch in the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram and have spectral classes of late O or early B. Stellar evolution models indicate that these stars are likely radially pulsating, driven by iron group opacity in their interiors. A number of variable stars with a similar driving mechanism exist near the hot subdwarf branch with multi-periodic oscillations caused by either pressure (p) or gravity (g) modes. No multi-periodic signals were detected in the OGLE discovery light curves since it would be difficult to detect short period signals associated with higher-order p modes with the OGLE cadence. Using the RISE instrument on the Liverpool Telescope, we produced high cadence light curves of two BLAPs, OGLE-BLAP-009 ( mag) and OGLE-BLAP-014…
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