Bibcode
Kurtz, D. W.; Kawaler, S. D.; Riddle, R. L.; Reed, M. D.; Cunha, M. S.; Wood, M.; Silvestri, N.; Watson, T. K.; Dolez, N.; Moskalik, P.; Zola, S.; Pallier, E.; Guzik, J. A.; Metcalfe, T. S.; Mukadam, A.; Nather, R. E.; Winget, D. E.; Sullivan, D. J.; Sullivan, T.; Sekiguchi, K.; Jiang, X. J.; Shobbrook, R. R.; Birch, P. V.; Ashoka, B. N.; Seetha, S.; Joshi, S.; Girish, V.; O'Donoghue, D.; Handler, G.; Mueller, M.; Gonzalez Perez, J. M.; Solheim, J.-E.; Johannessen, F.; Ulla, A.; Kepler, S. O.; Kanaan, A.; da Costa, A.; Fraga, L.; Giovannini, O.; Matthews, J. M.; Cameron, C.; Vauclair, G.; Nitta, A.; Kleinman, S. J.
Referencia bibliográfica
Baltic Astronomy, v.12, p.105-117.
Fecha de publicación:
0
2003
Número de citas
2
Número de citas referidas
2
Descripción
HR 1217 is a prototypical rapidly oscillating Ap star that has presented
a test to the theory of nonradial stellar pulsation. Prior observations
showed a clear pattern of five modes with alternating frequency spacings
of 33.3 mu Hz and 34.6 mu Hz, with a sixth mode at a problematic spacing
of 50.0 mu Hz (which equals 1.5 times 33.3 mu Hz) to the high-frequency
side. Asymptotic pulsation theory allowed for a frequency spacing of 34
mu Hz, but Hipparcos observations rule out such a spacing. Theoretical
calculations of magnetoacoustic modes in Ap stars by Cunha (2001)
predicted that there should be a previously undetected mode 34 mu Hz
higher than the main group, with a smaller spacing between it and the
highest one. The 20th extended coverage campaign of the Whole Earth
Telescope ({XCov20}) has discovered this frequency as predicted by Cunha
(2001). Amplitude modulation of several of the pulsation modes between
the 1986 and 2000 data sets has also been discovered, while important
parameters for modelling the geometry of the pulsation modes have been
shown to be unchanged. With stringent selection of the best data from
the WET network the amplitude spectrum shows highest peaks at only 50 mu
mag and formal errors on the determined amplitudes are 14 mu mag. Some
lessons for future use of WET for the highest precision photometry on
bright stars are discussed.