4.7 Article

The single-sided pulsator CO Camelopardalis

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 494, Issue 4, Pages 5118-5133

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/staa989

Keywords

stars: individual: CO Cam (TIC 160268882; HD 106112); stars: oscillations; stars: variables: delta Scuti

Funding

  1. UK Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC) [ST/M000877/1]
  2. Polish National Science Centre (NCN) [2015/18/A/ST9/00578]
  3. Rose Hills Foundation
  4. Sloan Foundation [FG-2018-10515]
  5. State Research Agency (AEI) of the Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities (MCIU)
  6. European Regional Development Fund (FEDER) [AYA2017-83383-P]
  7. Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities [P/308614]
  8. General Budgets of the Autonomous Community of the Canary Islands by the Ministry of Economy, Industry, Trade and Knowledge
  9. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) of Canada
  10. 5th National Committee of the Italian National Institute forNuclear Physics (INFN) under the grantMAPS 3D
  11. NASA Explorer Program
  12. Danish National Research Foundation [DNRF106]
  13. ESA PRODEX [PEA 4000119301]
  14. Stellar Astrophysics Centre (SAC) at Aarhus University
  15. STFC [ST/M000877/1, ST/R000786/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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CO Cam (TIC 160268882) is the second 'single-sided pulsator' to be discovered. These are stars where one hemisphere pulsates with a significantly higher amplitude than the other side of the star. CO Cam is a binary star comprised of an Am d Sct primary star with T-eff = 7070 +/- 150 K, and a spectroscopically undetected G main-sequence secondary star. The dominant pulsating side of the primary star is centred on the L1 point. We have modelled the spectral energy distribution combined with radial velocities, and independently the TESS light curve combined with radial velocities. Both of these give excellent agreement and robust system parameters for both stars. The d Sct star is an oblique pulsator with at least four low radial overtone (probably) f modes with the pulsation axis coinciding with the tidal axis of the star, the line of apsides. Preliminary theoretical modelling indicates that the modes must produce much larger flux perturbations near the L1 point, although this is difficult to understand because the pulsating star does not come near to filling its Roche lobe. More detailed models of distorted pulsating stars should be developed. These newly discovered single-sided pulsators offer new opportunities for astrophysical inference from stars that are oblique pulsators in close binary stars.

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