Reduced observations of HD112429 Virtual Observatory Resource

Authors
  1. Van Reeth T.
  2. De Cat P.
  3. Van Beeck J.
  4. Prat V.
  5. Wright D.J.
  6. Lehmann H.,Chene A.-N.
  7. Kambe E.
  8. Yang S.L.S.
  9. Gentile G.
  10. Joos M.
  11. Published by
    CDS
Abstract

The TESS space mission provides us with high-precision photometric observations of large numbers of bright stars over more than 70% of the entire sky, allowing us to revisit and characterise well-known stars. We aim to conduct an asteroseismic analysis of the gamma Doradus (gamma Dor) star HD 112429 using both the available ground-based spectroscopy and TESS photometry, and assess the conditions required to measure the near-core rotation rate and buoyancy travel time. We collect and reduce the available five sectors of short-cadence TESS photometry of this star, as well as 672 legacy observations from six medium- to high-resolution ground-based spectrographs. We determine the stellar pulsation frequencies from both data sets using iterative prewhitening, do asymptotic g mode modelling of the star and investigate the corresponding spectral line profile variations using the pixel-by-pixel method. We validate the pulsation frequencies from the TESS data up to S/N>=5.6, confirming recent reports in the literature that the classical criterion S/N>=4 does not suffice for space-based observations. We identify the pulsations as prograde dipole g modes and r-mode pulsations, and measure a near-core rotation rate of 1.536(3)d^-1^ and a buoyancy travel time {Pi}0 of 4190(50) s. These results are in agreement with the observed spectral line profile variations, which were qualitatively evaluated using a newly developed toy model. We establish a set of conditions that have to be fulfilled for an asymptotic asteroseismic analysis of g-mode pulsators. In the case of HD112429, two TESS sectors of space photometry suffice. Although a detailed asteroseismic modelling analysis is not viable for g-mode pulsators with only short or sparse light curves of space photometry, it is possible to determine global asteroseismic quantities for a subset of these stars. Thanks to the ongoing TESS mission, this will allow us to characterise many more stars than only those with years of data.

Keywords
  1. variable-stars
  2. photometry
  3. visible-astronomy
  4. spectroscopy
Bibliographic source Bibcode
2022A&A...662A..58V
See also HTML
https://cdsarc.cds.unistra.fr/viz-bin/cat/J/A+A/662/A58
IVOA Identifier IVOID
ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/662/A58
Document Object Identifer DOI
doi:10.26093/cds/vizier.36620058

Access

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https://vizier.cds.unistra.fr/viz-bin/VizieR-2?-source=J/A+A/662/A58
https://vizier.iucaa.in/viz-bin/VizieR-2?-source=J/A+A/662/A58
http://vizieridia.saao.ac.za/viz-bin/VizieR-2?-source=J/A+A/662/A58
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History

2022-06-14T16:09:34Z
Resource record created
2022-06-14T16:09:34Z
Created
2022-08-25T12:53:40Z
Updated

Contact

Name
CDS support team
Postal Address
CDS, Observatoire de Strasbourg, 11 rue de l'Universite, F-67000 Strasbourg, France
E-Mail
cds-question@unistra.fr