Evidence for the pulsational origin of the Long Secondary Periods: The red supergiant star V424 Lac (HD 216946) (original) (raw)
ADS
Abstract
The results of a long-term UBV photometric monitoring of the red supergiant (RSG) star V424 Lac are presented. V424 Lac shows multiperiodic brightness variations which can be attributed to pulsational oscillations. A much longer period ( P = 1601 d), that allows us to classify this star as a long secondary period variable star (LSPV) has been also detected. The B - V and U - B color variations related to the long secondary period (LSP) are similar to those related to the shorter periods, supporting the pulsational nature of LSP. The long period brightness variation of V424 Lac is accompanied by a near-UV (NUV) excess, which was spectroscopically detected in a previous study [Massey, P., Plez, B., Levesque, E.M., et al., 2005. ApJ 634, 1286] and which is now found to be variable from photometry. On the basis of the results found for V424 Lac, the NUV excess recently found in a number of RSGs may be due not solely to circumstellar dust but may also have a contribution from a still undetected LSP variability.
Publication:
New Astronomy
Pub Date:
October 2007
DOI:
Bibcode:
Keywords:
- 97.20.Pm;
- 97.10.Sj;
- 97.20.Jg;
- 97.20.-w;
- Supergiant stars;
- Pulsations oscillations and stellar seismology;
- Main-sequence: late-type stars;
- Normal stars : general or individual