An 18.9-minute Blue Large-Amplitude Pulsator Crossing the 'Hertzsprung Gap' of Hot Subdwarfs
Jie Lin, Chengyuan Wu, Xiaofeng Wang, P\'eter N\'emeth, Herang Xiong,, Tao Wu, Alexei Filippenko, Yongzhi Cai, Thomas Brink, Shengyu Yan, Xiangyun, Zeng, Yangpin Luo, Danfeng Xiang, Jujia Zhang, Weikang Zheng, Yi Yang, Jun, Mo, Gaobo Xi, Jicheng Zhang, Abdusamatjan Iskandar

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and analysis of a rare blue large-amplitude pulsator with an 18.9-minute period, providing insights into its evolutionary stage as a short-lived phase of shell-helium ignition in hot subdwarfs.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed study of a BLAP crossing the Hertzsprung gap, revealing its unique period change rate and evolutionary status.
Findings
The star has an 18.9-minute pulsation period.
It exhibits an unusually large positive period change rate.
It is in a short-lived shell-helium ignition phase.
Abstract
Blue large-amplitude pulsators (BLAPs) represent a new and rare class of hot pulsating stars with unusually large amplitudes and short periods. Up to now, only 24 confirmed BLAPs have been identified from more than one billion monitored stars, including a group with pulsation period longer than min (classical BLAPs, hereafter) and the other group with pulsation period below min. The evolutionary path that could give rise to such kinds of stellar configurations is unclear. Here we report on a comprehensive study of the peculiar BLAP discovered by the Tsinghua University - Ma Huateng Telescopes for Survey (TMTS), TMTS J035143.63+584504.2 (TMTS-BLAP-1). This new BLAP has an 18.9 min pulsation period and is similar to the BLAPs with a low surface gravity and an extended helium-enriched envelope, suggesting that it is a low-gravity BLAP at the shortest-period end. In…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
