Asteroseismology of Massive Stars with the TESS Mission: The Runaway β Cep Pulsator PHL 346 = HN Aqr

Handler, Gerald and Pigulski, Andrzej and Daszyńska-Daszkiewicz, Jadwiga and Irrgang, Andreas and Kilkenny, David and Guo, Zhao and Przybilla, Norbert and Aliçavuş, Filiz Kahraman and Kallinger, Thomas and Pascual-Granado, Javier and Niemczura, Ewa and Różański, Tomasz and Chowdhury, Sowgata and Buzasi, Derek L. and Mirouh, Giovanni M. and Bowman, Dominic M. and Johnston, Cole and Pedersen, May G. and Simón-Díaz, Sergio and Moravveji, Ehsan and Gazeas, Kosmas and De Cat, Peter and Vanderspek, Roland K. and Ricker, George R. (2019) Asteroseismology of Massive Stars with the TESS Mission: The Runaway β Cep Pulsator PHL 346 = HN Aqr. The Astrophysical Journal, 873 (1). L4. ISSN 2041-8213

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Abstract

We report an analysis of the first known β Cep pulsator observed by the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) mission, the runaway star PHL 346 = HN Aqr. The star, previously known as a singly periodic pulsator, has at least 34 oscillation modes excited, 12 of those in the g-mode domain and 22 p modes. Analysis of archival data implies that the amplitude and frequency of the dominant mode and the stellar radial velocity were variable over time. A binary nature would be inconsistent with the inferred ejection velocity from the Galactic disk of 420 km s−1, which is too large to be survivable by a runaway binary system. A kinematic analysis of the star results in an age constraint (23 ± 1 Myr) that can be imposed on asteroseismic modeling and that can be used to remove degeneracies in the modeling process. Our attempts to match the excitation of the observed frequency spectrum resulted in pulsation models that were too young. Hence, asteroseismic studies of runaway pulsators can become vital not only in tracing the evolutionary history of such objects, but to understand the interior structure of massive stars in general. TESS is now opening up these stars for detailed asteroseismic investigation.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Universal Eprints > Physics and Astronomy
Depositing User: Managing Editor
Date Deposited: 06 Jun 2023 05:45
Last Modified: 20 Nov 2023 03:40
URI: http://journal.article2publish.com/id/eprint/2075

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