4.7 Article

Pulsating B stars in the Scorpius-Centaurus Association with TESS

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 515, Issue 1, Pages 828-840

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stac1816

Keywords

stars: oscillations; open clusters and associations: individual: Scorpius-Centaurus; binaries: eclipsing; asteroseismology

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [DP210103119]
  2. Danish National Research Foundation [DNRF106]

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In this study, we used data from NASA's TESS Mission to investigate 119 B stars in the Scorpius-Centaurus Association. We observed pulsations in 81 stars and confirmed previous reports about these pulsations. We also discovered interesting binary systems.
We study 119 B stars located in the Scorpius-Centaurus Association using data from NASA's TESS Mission. We see pulsations in 81 stars (68 per cent) across the full range of effective temperatures. In particular, we confirm previous reports of low-frequency pulsations in stars whose temperatures fall between the instability strips of SPB stars (slowly pulsating B stars) and delta Scuti stars. By taking the stellar densities into account, we conclude that these cannot be p modes and confirm previous suggestions that these are probably rapidly rotating SPB stars. We also confirm that they follow two period-luminosity relations that are consistent with prograde sectoral g modes that are dipole (l = m = 1) and quadrupole (l = m = 2), respectively. One of the stars (xi(2) Cen) is a hybrid pulsator that shows regular spacings in both g and p modes. We confirm that alpha Cru has low-amplitude p-mode pulsations, making it one of the brightest beta Cephei stars in the sky. We also find several interesting binaries, including a very short-period heartbeat star (HD 132094), a previously unknown eclipsing binary (pi Lup), and an eclipsing binary with high-amplitude tidally driven pulsations (HR 5846). The results clearly demonstrate the power of TESS for studying variability in stellar associations.

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