The Astronomical Journal | 2021

New Blue and Red Variable Stars in NGC 247

 

Abstract


Images recorded with the Gemini Multi-Object Spectrograph (GMOS) on Gemini South are combined with archival images from other facilities to search for variable stars in the southern half of the nearby disk galaxy NGC 247. Fifteen new periodic and nonperiodic variables are identified. These include three Cepheids with periods <25 days, four semiregular variables, one of which shows light variations similar to those of R CrB stars, five variables with intrinsic visible/red brightnesses and colors that are similar to those of luminous blue variables (LBVs), and three fainter blue variables, one of which may be a noneclipsing close binary system. The S Doradus instability strip defines the upper envelope of a distinct sequence of objects on the (i, g−i) color–magnitude diagram (CMD) of NGC 247. The frequency of variability of an amplitude ≥0.1 magnitude in the part of the CMD that contains LBVs over the seven-month period when the GMOS images were recorded is ∼0.2. The light curve of the B[e] supergiant J004702.18–204739.9, which is among the brightest stars in NGC 247, is also examined. Low-amplitude variations on day-to-day timescales are found, coupled with a systematic trend in mean brightness over a six-month time interval.

Volume 162
Pages None
DOI 10.3847/1538-3881/ac09e6
Language English
Journal The Astronomical Journal

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