On the Existence of "Maia variables"
F. Kahraman Ali\c{c}avu\c{s}, G. Handler, S. Chowdhury, E. Niemczura,, R. Jayaraman, P. De Cat, D. Ozuyar, F. Ali\c{c}avu\c{s}

TL;DR
This study investigates the existence of Maia variables by analyzing 31 candidate stars through spectroscopic and photometric methods, concluding that their variability can be explained by known stellar phenomena, thus questioning the existence of Maia variables as a distinct class.
Contribution
The paper provides detailed spectroscopic and photometric analysis of candidate Maia variables, demonstrating their variability is due to known mechanisms and challenging their classification as a separate pulsating star group.
Findings
Most targets are within known instability strips.
Some targets show binarity or rapid rotation.
No evidence supports Maia variables as a distinct class.
Abstract
There are different classes of pulsating stars in the H-R diagram. While many of those classes are undisputed, some remain a mystery such as the objects historically called "Maia variables". Whereas the presence of such a class was suggested seven decades ago, no pulsational driving mechanism is known that could excite short-period oscillations in these late B to early A-type stars. Alternative hypotheses that would render the reports of variability of those stars erroneous have been proposed such as incorrect effective temperatures, binarity or rapid rotation, but no certain conclusions have been reached yet. Therefore the existence of these variables as a homogeneous class of pulsating star is still under discussion. Meanwhile, many new candidates of these variables have been claimed especially by using photometric observations of space telescopes. In this study, we examined 31…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSimulation Techniques and Applications · Modeling, Simulation, and Optimization
