Bibcode
Vauclair, G.; Moskalik, P.; Pfeiffer, B.; Chevreton, M.; Dolez, N.; Serre, B.; Kleinman, S. J.; Barstow, M.; Sansom, A. E.; Solheim, J.-E.; Belmonte, J. A.; Kawaler, S. D.; Kepler, S. O.; Kanaan, A.; Giovannini, O.; Winget, D. E.; Watson, T. K.; Nather, R. E.; Clemens, J. C.; Provencal, J.; Dixson, J. S.; Yanagida, K.; Nitta Kleinman, A.; Montgomery, M.; Klumpe, E. W.; Bruvold, A.; O'Brien, M. S.; Hansen, C. J.; Grauer, A. D.; Bradley, P. A.; Wood, M. A.; Achilleos, N.; Jiang, S. Y.; Fu, J. N.; Marar, T. M. K.; Ashoka, B. N.; Meĭstas, E. G.; Chernyshev, A. V.; Mazeh, T.; Leibowitz, E.; Hemar, S.; Krzesiński, J.; Pajdosz, G.; Zoła, S.
Referencia bibliográfica
Astronomy and Astrophysics, v.381, p.122-150 (2002)
Fecha de publicación:
1
2002
Revista
Número de citas
48
Número de citas referidas
33
Descripción
The pulsating PG 1159 planetary nebula central star RXJ 2117+3412 has
been observed over three successive seasons of a multisite photometric
campaign. The asteroseismological analysis of the data, based on the 37
identified l=1 modes among the 48 independent pulsation frequencies
detected in the power spectrum, leads to the derivation of the
rotational splitting, the period spacing and the mode trapping cycle and
amplitude, from which a number of fundamental parameters can be deduced.
The average rotation period is 1.16±0.05 days. The trend for the
rotational splitting to decrease with increasing periods is incompatible
with a solid body rotation. The total mass is
0.56+0.02-0.04 Msolar and the He-rich
envelope mass fraction is in the range 0.013-0.078 M*. The
luminosity derived from asteroseismology is log(L/Lsolar)=
4.05 +0.23-0.32 and the distance 760
+230-235 pc. At such a distance, the linear size
of the planetary nebulae is 2.9±0.9 pc. The role of mass loss on
the excitation mechanism and its consequence on the amplitude variations
is discussed.
Based on data obtained in observing time allocated by the Bernard Lyot
Telescope, INSU/CNRS, France, the TCS at Teide Observatory, Tenerife,
Spain, the INT and JKT Telescopes at Roque de Los Muchachos Observatory,
La Palma, Spain, the Laboratorio Nacional de Astrofisica/CNPq, Brazil,
the McDonal Observatory, Texas, USA, the Steward Observatory, Arizona,
USA, the Mauna Kea Observatory, University of Hawaii, USA, the Mount
Stromlo and Siding Spring Observatory, Australia, the Beijing
Observatory, China, the Vainu Bappu Observatory, India, the Maidanak
Observatory, Uzbekistan, the Wise Observatory, Israel, and the Suhora
Observatory, Poland.