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A Whole Earth Telescope campaign on the pulsating subdwarf B binary system PG 1336-018 (NY Vir)

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posted on 2012-10-24, 09:15 authored by D. Kilkenny, D. O'Donoghue, P. Martinez, F. Van Wyk, R. S. Stobie, F. Marang, M. D. Reed, S. D. Kawaler, S. J. Kleinman, A. Mukadam, A. Nitta, T. S. Metcalfe, J. L. Provencal, T. K. Watson, D. J. Sullivan, T. Sullivan, R. Shobbrook, X. J. Jiang, S. Joshi, B. N. Ashoka, S. Seetha, E. Leibowitz, P. Ibbetson, H. Mendelson, E. Meištas, R. Kalytis, D. Ališauskas, S. Zola, J. Krzesinski, W. Ogloza, P. Moskalik, R. Silvotti, A. Piccioni, G. Vauclair, N. Dolez, M. Chevreton, S. Dreizler, S. L. Schuh, J. L. Deetjen, J-E. Solheim, J. M. Gonzalez Perez, A. Ulla, R. Østensen, M. Manteiga, O. Suarez, M. Burleigh, S. O. Kepler, A. Kanaan, O. Giovannini
We present results from a multisite (‘Whole Earth Telescope’) photometric campaign on PG 1336−018, the close eclipsing binary system containing a pulsating subdwarf B (sdB) star. The main part of the campaign (1999 April) resulted in ∼172 h of observations, representing a coverage of about 47 per cent, and additional data were obtained outside the core campaign. Periodogram analysis shows that the light variations are dominated by three frequencies near 5757, 5585 and 5369 μHz (∼174, 179 and 186 s, respectively), although many frequencies are present, particularly in the range 5000–6000 μHz (∼200–170 s). We identify, with some confidence, 28 frequencies down to a semi-amplitude of 0.0005 in fractional intensity (equivalent to about 0.5 mmag). It is clear that the pulsation frequencies of PG 1336−018 have changed substantially since the 1996 discovery observations were made, and that amplitude changes occur, at least in the dominant three frequencies, on relatively short time-scales (of the order of a day). On the assumption that the pulsating star is phase-locked in the binary system, we have searched for rotational splitting of frequencies near the orbital and half of the orbital period, but the results are confused by aliasing at those frequencies (due to the data gaps caused by the eclipses). A preliminary model qualitatively matches the distribution of frequencies in PG 1336−018, with some good individual correspondences, but cannot be considered adequate because geometric cancellation should hide some of the modes which are apparently detected. Analysis of the pulsations during eclipse recovers three of the strongest modes, but the limited eclipse data — which can, at best, be only about 9 per cent of the total — do not allow mode identification at this stage. Simulations indicate that an overall coverage of about 80 per cent would be required for this to be viable. An attempt was made to determine phase shifts in the pulsation frequencies as a way of directly measuring the size of the binary orbit, but the uncertainties in the method are comparable to the light travel time across the orbit (probably less than a second).

Funding

SD, SLS and JLD (Visiting Astronomers at the German–Spanish Astronomical Centre, Calar Alto, operated by the Max-Planck-Institut for Astronomy, Heidelberg, jointly with the Spanish National Commission for Astronomy) acknowledge travel grant DR 281/10-1 from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft. DK thanks Chris Koen for discussion of and assistance with statistical analyses. PM is supported in part by Polish KBN grant 5 P03D 012 020. MDR was partially funded by NSF grant AST9876655 and by the NASA Astrophysics Theory Program through grant NAG-58352 and would like to thank the McDonald Observatory TAC for generous time allocation. OS would like to thank the Spanish DGESIC and Universidade de Vigo Xunt a de Galicia for partly funding his observations at Tenerife (grants PB97-1435-C02-02 and 64502C844). DJS thanks the MSSSO Time Allocation Committee for the observing time at Siding Spring, the University of Canterbury for the observing time at Mt. John, and the IITAP at Iowa State University for some travel support.

History

Citation

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 2003, 345 (3), pp. 834-846

Published in

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP), Royal Astronomical Society

issn

0035-8711

eissn

1365-2966

Copyright date

2003

Available date

2012-10-24

Publisher version

http://mnras.oxfordjournals.org/content/345/3/834

Language

en

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