Bibcode
Poretti, E.; Garrido, R.; Amado, P. J.; Uytterhoeven, K.; Handler, G.; Alonso, R.; Martín, S.; Aerts, C.; Catala, C.; Goupil, M. J.; Michel, E.; Mantegazza, L.; Mathias, P.; Pretorius, M. L.; Belmonte, J. A.; Claret, A.; Rodríguez, E.; Suarez, J. C.; Vuthela, F. F.; Weiss, W. W.; Ballereau, D.; Bouret, J. C.; Charpinet, S.; Hua, T.; Lüftinger, T.; Nesvacil, N.; Van't Veer-Menneret, C.
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics, v.406, p.203-211 (2003)
Advertised on:
7
2003
Journal
Citations
32
Refereed citations
20
Description
By pursuing the goal to find new variables in the COROT field-of-view we
characterised a sample of stars located in the lower part of the
instability strip. Our sample is composed of stars belonging to the disk
population in the solar neighbourhood. We found that 23% of the stars
display multiperiodic light variability up to a few mmag in amplitude,
i.e., easily detectable on a single night of photometry. uvbybeta
photometry fixed most of the variables in the middle of the instability
strip and high-resolution spectroscopy established that they have vsin i
>100 km s-1. An analysis of the Rodríguez &
Breger (cite{Rodr01}) sample (delta Sct stars in the whole Galaxy)
shows slightly different features, i.e., most delta Sct stars have a
0.05-mag redder (b-y)0 index and lower vsin i values.
Additional investigation in the open cluster NGC 6633 confirms the same
incidence of variability, i.e., around 20%. The wide variety of
pulsational behaviours of delta Sct stars (including unusual objects
such as a variable beyond the blue edge or a rapidly rotating
high-amplitude pulsator) makes them very powerful asteroseismic tools to
be used by COROT. Being quite common among bright stars, delta Sct
stars are suitable targets for optical observations from space.
Based on observations collected at the S. Pedro Martír, Sierra
Nevada, La Silla, Haute-Provence, South African and Roque de Los
Muchachos observatories.