Non-radially pulsating stars as microlensing sources
Sedighe Sajadian, Richard Ignace

TL;DR
This paper investigates how non-radially pulsating stars affect microlensing light curves, revealing mode-dependent features, degeneracies, and chromatic effects that can inform stellar pulsation studies.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed model of microlensing of NRP stars using spherical harmonics and analyzes the resulting light curve characteristics and degeneracies.
Findings
High-magnification events can be chromatic for certain modes.
Degeneracies occur in light curves for specific pulsation mode combinations.
Centroid shifts affect the timing of magnification peaks.
Abstract
We study the microlensing of Non-Radially Pulsating (NRP) stars. Pulsations are formulated for stellar radius and temperature using spherical harmonic functions with different values of l,m. The characteristics of the microlensing light curves from NRP stars are investigated in relation to different pulsation modes. For the microlensing of NRP stars, the light curve is not a simple multiplication of the magnification curve and the intrinsic luminosity curve of the source star, unless the effect of finite source size can be ignored. Three main conclusions can be drawn from the simulated light curves. First, for modes with and when the viewing inclination is more nearly pole-on, the stellar luminosity towards the observer changes little with pulsation phase. In this case, high-magnification microlensing events are chromatic and can reveal the variability of these source stars.…
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