Pulsating chromosphere of classical Cepheids. Calcium infrared triplet and H$\alpha$ profile variations
V. Hocd\'e, N. Nardetto, S. Borgniet, E. Lagadec, P. Kervella, A., M\'erand, N. Evans, D. Gillet, Ph. Mathias, A. Chiavassa, A. Gallenne, L., Breuval, B. Javanmardi

TL;DR
This study investigates the dynamical structure and size of the chromosphere in Cepheid variable stars using high-resolution spectroscopy, revealing a significant chromospheric extension and circumstellar features that impact period-luminosity relations.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed quantification of Cepheid chromosphere sizes and dynamics across pulsation cycles, highlighting the importance of Ca IR lines in understanding stellar atmospheres.
Findings
Chromosphere size is at least 50% of stellar radius in long-period Cepheids.
Significant Van Hoof effect observed for periods >10 days.
Detection of circumstellar envelope features in Hα lines.
Abstract
It has been shown recently that the infrared emission of Cepheids, which is constant over the pulsation cycle, might be due to a pulsating shell of ionized gas of about 15\% of the stellar radius, which could be attributed to the chromospheric activity of Cepheids. The aim of this paper is to investigate the dynamical structure of the chromosphere of Cepheids along the pulsation cycle and quantify its size. We present H and Calcium Near InfraRed triplet (Ca IR) profile variations using high-resolution spectroscopy with the UVES spectrograph of a sample of 24 Cepheids with a good period coverage from 3 to 60 days. After a qualitative analysis of the spectral lines profiles, we quantify the Van Hoof effect (velocity gradient between the H and Ca IR) as a function of the period of the Cepheids. Then, we use the Schwarzschild mechanism (a line doubling due to a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomical and nuclear sciences · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
