Archivi tag: stellar variability

Discovered a new class of variable stars

Grazie ad una serie di osservazioni realizzate con il telescopio svizzero Eulero da 1,2m di La Silla in Cile, un gruppo di astronomi hanno identificato un nuovo tipo di stella che presenta delle pulsazioni. La scoperta si basa sull’individuazione di minuscole variazioni di luminosità di alcune stelle nell’ammasso. Inoltre, le osservazioni hanno rivelato alcune proprietà di queste stelle precedentemente sconosciute che sfidando gli attuali modelli sull’evoluzione stellare e pongono interessanti domande sull’orgine della variabilità.

The Swiss are justly famed for their craftsmanship when creating extremely precise pieces of technology. Now a Swiss team from the Geneva Observatory has achieved extraordinary precision using a comparatively small 1.2-metre telescope for an observing programme stretching over many years.

They have discovered a new class of variable stars by measuring minute variations in stellar brightness.

The new results are based on regular measurements of the brightness of more than three thousand stars in the open star cluster NGC 3766 over a period of seven years. They reveal how 36 of the cluster’s stars followed an unexpected pattern, they had tiny regular variations in their brightness at the level of 0.1% of the stars’ normal brightness. These variations had periods between about two and 20 hours. The stars are somewhat hotter and brighter than the Sun, but otherwise apparently unremarkable. The new class of variable stars is yet to be given a name. This level of precision in the measurements is twice as good as that achieved by comparable studies from other telescopes and sufficient to reveal these tiny variations for the first time. “We have reached this level of sensitivity thanks to the high quality of the observations, combined with a very careful analysis of the data”, says Nami Mowlavi leader of the research team, “but also because we have carried out an extensive observation programme that lasted for seven years. It probably wouldn’t have been possible to get so much observing time on a bigger telescope”. Many stars are known as variable or pulsating stars, because their apparent brightness changes over time. How the brightness of these stars changes depends in complex ways on the properties of their interiors. This phenomenon has allowed the development of a whole branch of astrophysics called asteroseismology, where astronomers can “listen” to these stellar vibrations, in order to probe the physical properties of the stars and get to know more about their inner workings. “The very existence of this new class of variable stars is a challenge to astrophysicists”, says Sophie Saesen another team member. “Current theoretical models predict that their light is not supposed to vary periodically at all, so our current efforts are focused on finding out more about the behaviour of this strange new type of star.

Although the cause of the variability remains unknown, there is a tantalising clue: some of the stars seem to be fast rotators.

They spin at speeds that are more than half of their critical velocity, which is the threshold where stars become unstable and throw off material into space. “In those conditions, the fast spin will have an important impact on their internal properties, but we are not able yet to adequately model their light variations”, explains Mowlavi. “We hope our discovery will encourage specialists to address the issue in the hope of understanding the origin of these mysterious variations.

ESO: New Kind of Variable Star Discovered

arXiv: Stellar variability in open clusters. I. A new class of variable stars in NGC 3766

Fifty Years of Seismology of the Sun and Stars

In the last 50 years, helioseismology has made significant contributions to the knowledge of the Sun’s interior physics and has led the way to asteroseismology. We have now reached an era where more sophisticated questions are being asked to understand the subtle properties of the Sun and other stars due to the synoptic and high-resolution observations available from BISON, GONG and space missions such as SOHO, SDO, CoRot and Kepler. On this occasion, a workshop on the theme of “Fifty Years of Seismology of the Sun and Stars” is being organized to discuss the advances, reflect on the progress that has been made, and address new challenges. We plan to bring together helio- and asteroseismologists, theorists and observers in a journey that will take us from the interior of the Sun and its magnetism towards the structure of distant stars and activity cycles.

Topics include:

  • Historical perspective
  • Advances in observational technique
  • Solar structure and dynamics
  • Stellar activity and variability
  • Local helioseismology and helioseismic imaging
  • Numerical simulations of convections and waves
  • Seismology of the solar atmosphere
  • Requirements for future instrumentation
  • Prospects for future missions