Bibcode
Mahy, L.; Gosset, E.; Baudin, F.; Rauw, G.; Godart, M.; Morel, T.; Degroote, P.; Aerts, C.; Blomme, R.; Cuypers, J.; Noels, A.; Michel, E.; Baglin, A.; Auvergne, M.; Catala, C.; Samadi, R.
Referencia bibliográfica
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 525, id.A101, 12 pp.
Fecha de publicación:
1
2011
Revista
Número de citas
36
Número de citas referidas
26
Descripción
Context. The second short run (SRa02) of the CoRoT space mission for
asteroseismology was partly devoted to stars belonging to the Mon OB2
association. An intense monitoring has been performed on Plaskett's star
(HD 47129) and the unprecedented quality of the light curve allows us to
shed new light on this very massive, non-eclipsing binary system.
Aims: We particularly aimed at detecting periodic variability that might
be associated with pulsations or interactions between both components.
We also searched for variations related to the orbital cycle that could
help to constrain the inclination and the morphology of the binary
system. Methods: We applied an iterative Fourier-based
prewhitening and a multiperiodic fitting procedure to analyse the time
series and extract the frequencies of variations from the CoRoT light
curve. We describe the noise properties to tentatively define an
appropriate significance criterion and, in consequence, to only point
out the peaks at a certain significance level. We also detect the
variations related to the orbital motion and study them with the
NIGHTFALL programme. Results: The periodogram computed from
Plaskett's star CoRoT light curve mainly exhibits a majority of peaks at
low frequencies. Among these peaks, we highlight a list of 43 values,
notably including two different sets of harmonic frequencies whose
fundamental peaks are located at about 0.07 and 0.82 d-1. The
former represents the orbital frequency of the binary system, whilst the
latter could probably be associated with non-radial pulsations. The
study of the 0.07 d-1 variations reveals a hot spot most
probably situated on the primary star and facing the secondary.
Conclusions: The investigation of this unique dataset constitutes a
further step in the understanding of Plaskett's star. These results
provide a first basis for future seismic modelling and put forward the
probable existence of non-radial pulsations in Plaskett's star.
Moreover, the fit of the orbital variations confirms the problem of the
distance of this system which was already mentioned in previous works. A
hot region between both components renders the determination of the
inclination ambiguous.
The CoRoT space mission was developed and is operated by the French
space agency CNES, with participation of ESA's RSSD and Science
Programmes, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Germany and Spain.Table 2 is only
available in electronic form at http://www.aanda.org