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web science | 1991

Asteroseismology of the DOV star PG 1159 - 035 with the Whole Earth Telescope

D. E. Winget; R. E. Nather; J. C. Clemens; J. L. Provencal; S. J. Kleinman; P. A. Bradley; Matt A. Wood; C. F. Claver; Marian Frueh; A. D. Grauer; B. P. Hine; C. J. Hansen; G. Fontaine; N. Achilleos; D. T. Wickramasinghe; T. M. K. Marar; S. Seetha; B. N. Ashoka; D. O'Donoghue; Brian Warner; D. W. Kurtz; David A. H. Buckley; J. Brickhill; G. Vauclair; N. Dolez; M. Chevreton; M. A. Barstow; J.-E. Solheim; A. Kanaan; S. O. Kepler

Results are reported from 264.1 hr of nearly continuous time-series photometry on the pulsating prewhite dwarf star (DPV) PG 1159 - 035. The power spectrum of the data set is completely resolved into 125 individual frequencies; 101 of them are identified with specific quantized pulsation modes, and the rest are completely consistent with such modal assignment. It is argued that the luminosity variations are certainly the result of g-mode pulsations. Although the amplitudes of some of the peaks exhibit significant variations on the time scales of a year or so, the underlying frequency structure of the pulsations is stable over much longer intervals. The existing linear theory is invoked to determine, or strongly constrain, many of the fundamental physical parameters describing this star. Its mass is found to be 0.586 solar mass, is rotation period 1.38 days, its magnetic field less than 6000 G, its pulsation and rotation axes to be aligned, and its outer layers to be compositionally stratified.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1994

Whole earth telescope observations of the DBV white dwarf GD 358

D. E. Winget; R. E. Nather; J. C. Clemens; J. L. Provencal; S. J. Kleinman; P. A. Bradley; C. F. Claver; J. S. Dixson; M. H. Montgomery; C. J. Hansen; B. P. Hine; P. Birch; M. Candy; T. M. K. Marar; S. Seetha; B. N. Ashoka; Elia M. Leibowitz; D. O'Donoghue; Brian Warner; David A. H. Buckley; P. Tripe; G. Vauclair; N. Dolez; M. Chevreton; T. Serre; R. Garrido; S. O. Kepler; A. Kanaan; T. Augusteijn; Matt A. Wood

We report on the analysis of 154 hours of early continuous high-speed photometry on the pulsating DB white dwarf (DBV) GD 358, obtained during the Whole Earth Telescope (WET) run of 1990 May. The power spectrum of the light curve is dominated by power in the range from 1000 to 2400 microHz with more than 180 significant peaks in the total spectrum. We identify all of the triplet frequencies as degree l = 1, and from the details of their spacings we derive the total stellar mass as 0.61 + or - 0.03 solar mass, the mass of the outer helium envelope as 2.0 + or - 1.0 x 10(exp -6) M(sub *), the absolute luminosity as 0.050 + or - 0.012 solar luminosity and the distance as 42 + or - 3 pc. We find strong evidence for differential rotation in the radial direction -- the outer envelope is rotating at least 1.8 times faster than the core -- and we detect the presence of a weak magnetic field with a strength of 1300 + or - 300 G. We also find a significant power at the sums and differences of the dominant frequencies, indicating nonlinear processes are significant, but they have a richness and complexity that rules out resonant mode coupling as a major cause.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1998

Understanding the Cool DA White Dwarf Pulsator, G29-38

S. J. Kleinman; R. E. Nather; D. E. Winget; J. C. Clemens; P. A. Bradley; A. Kanaan; J. L. Provencal; C. F. Claver; T. K. Watson; K. Yanagida; A. Nitta; J. S. Dixson; Matt A. Wood; A. D. Grauer; B. P. Hine; G. Fontaine; James Liebert; D. J. Sullivan; D. T. Wickramasinghe; N. Achilleos; T. M. K. Marar; S. Seetha; B. N. Ashoka; E. G. Meištas; Elia M. Leibowitz; P. Moskalik; Jurek Krzesinski; J.-E. Solheim; A. Bruvold; D. O'Donoghue

The white dwarfs are promising laboratories for the study of cosmochronology and stellar evolution. Through observations of the pulsating white dwarfs, we can measure their internal structures and compositions, critical to understanding post main sequence evolution, along with their cooling rates, allowing us to calibrate their ages directly. The most important set of white dwarf variables to measure are the oldest of the pulsators, the cool DAVs, which have not previously been explored through asteroseismology due to their complexity and instability. Through a time-series photometry data set spanning ten years, we explore the pulsation spectrum of the cool DAV, G29-38 and find an underlying structure of 19 (not including multiplet components) normal-mode, probably l=1 pulsations amidst an abundance of time variability and linear combination modes. Modelling results are incomplete, but we suggest possible starting directions and discuss probable values for the stellar mass and hydrogen layer size. For the first time, we have made sense out of the complicated power spectra of a large-amplitude DA pulsator. We have shown its seemingly erratic set of observed frequencies can be understood in terms of a recurring set of normal-mode pulsations and their linear combinations. With this result, we have opened the interior secrets of the DAVs to future asteroseismological modelling, thereby joining the rest of the known white dwarf pulsators.


web science | 1991

A detection of the evolutionary time scale of the DA white dwarf G117- B15A with the whole earth telescope

S. O. Kepler; D. E. Winget; R. E. Nather; P. A. Bradley; A. D. Grauer; G. Fontaine; Pierre Bergeron; G. Vauclair; C. F. Claver; T. M. K. Marar; S. Seetha; B. N. Ashoka; Tsevi Mazeh; Elia M. Leibowitz; N. Dolez; M. Chevreton; M. A. Barstow; J. C. Clemens; S. J. Kleinman; A. E. Sansom; R. W. Tweedy; A. Kanaan; B. P. Hine; J. L. Provencal; F. Wesemael; M. A. Wood; P. Brassard; J.-E. Solheim; P.-I. Emanuelsen

The time rate of change for the main pulsation period of the 13,000 K DA white dwarf G117 - B15A has been detected using the Whole Earth Telescope (WET). The observed rate of period change, P(dot) = (12.0 + or - 3.5) x 10 to the -15th s/s, is somewhat larger than the published theoretical calculations of the rate of period change due to cooling, based on carbon core white dwarf models. Other effects that could contribute to the observed rate of period change are discussed.


web science | 2002

Asteroseismology of RXJ 2117+3412, the hottest pulsating PG 1159 star

G. Vauclair; P. Moskalik; B. Pfeiffer; M. Chevreton; N. Dolez; B. Serre; S. J. Kleinman; M. A. Barstow; A. E. Sansom; J.-E. Solheim; Juan Antonio Belmonte; Steven D. Kawaler; S. O. Kepler; A. Kanaan; O. Giovannini; D. E. Winget; T. K. Watson; R. E. Nather; J. C. Clemens; J. L. Provencal; J. S. Dixson; K. Yanagida; A. Nitta Kleinman; M. H. Montgomery; E. W. Klumpe; A. Bruvold; M. S. O'Brien; C. J. Hansen; A. D. Grauer; P. A. Bradley

The pulsating PG 1159 planetary nebula central star RXJ 2117+3412 has been observed over three successive seasons of a multisite photometric campaign. The asteroseismological analysis of the data, based on the 37 identified ` = 1 modes among the 48 independent pulsation frequencies detected in the power spectrum, leads to the derivation of the rotational splitting, the period spacing and the mode trapping cycle and amplitude, from which a number of fundamental parameters can be deduced. The average rotation period is 1.16 ± 0.05 days. The trend for the rotational splitting to decrease with increasing periods is incompatible with a solid body rotation. The total mass is 0.56 −0.04 M and the He-rich envelope mass fraction is in the range 0.013–0.078 M∗. The luminosity derived from asteroseismology is log(L/L ) = 4.05 +0.23 −0.32 and the distance 760 +230 −235 pc. At such a distance, the linear size of the planetary nebulae is 2.9 ± 0.9 pc. The role of mass loss on the excitation mechanism and its consequence on the amplitude variations is discussed.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1990

Whole Earth Telescope observations of the white dwarf G29-38 : phase variations of the 615 second period

D. E. Winget; R. E. Nather; J. C. Clemens; J. L. Provencal; S. J. Kleinman; P. A. Bradley; Matt A. Wood; C. F. Claver; E. L. Robinson; A. D. Grauer; B. P. Hine; G. Fontaine; N. Achilleos; T. M. K. Marar; S. Seetha; B. N. Ashoka; D. O'Donoghue; Brian Warner; D. W. Kurtz; Peter Martinez; G. Vauclair; M. Chevreton; A. Kanaan; S. O. Kepler; T. Augusteijn; J. van Paradijs; C. J. Hansen; James Liebert

An extensive set of high-speed photometric observations obtained with the Whole Earth Telescope network is used to show that the complex light curve of the ZZ Zeti (DAV) star G29-38 is dominated by a single, constant amplitude period of 615 s during the time span of these observations. The pulse arrival times for this period exhibit a systematic variation in phase readily explained by light-travel time effects produced by reflex orbital motion about an unseen companion. The best-fit model to the observations indicates a highly eccentric orbit, a period of 109 + or - 13 days and a minimum mass of 0.5 solar mass for the companion. 23 refs.


The Astronomical Journal | 1993

High-speed photometric observations of the pulsating DA white dwarf GD 165

Pierre Bergeron; G. Fontaine; P. Brassard; R. Lamontagne; F. Wesemael; D. E. Winget; R. E. Nather; P. A. Bradley; C. F. Claver; J. C. Clemens; S. J. Kleinman; J. L. Provencal; John T. McGraw; P. Birch; M. Candy; David A. H. Buckley; P. Tripe; T. Augusteijn; G. Vauclair; S. O. Kepler; A. Kanaan

New high-speed photometric observations of the pulsating DA white dwarf GD 165 are presented. The Fourier spectrum of the light curve of GD 165 exhibits two main regions of power at 120 and 193 s. The presence of a high-amplitude long period mode near ∼1800 s reported by Bergeron and McGraw is not confirmed by these new observations. Light curves obtained with the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope reveal previously undetected low-amplitude harmonic oscillations. Observations with the Whole Earth Telescope are used to resolve the two principal regions of power. The 120 and 193 s peaks are shown to be multiplets composed of at least three, and possibly five frequency components. The most likely explanation is that these two peaks correspond to nonradial gravity modes with different values of the radial order k and with l=1 or 2 split into 2l+1 components by slow rotation


web science | 1992

Whole Earth Telescope observations of V471 Tauri - The nature of the white dwarf variations

J. C. Clemens; R. E. Nather; D. E. Winget; E. L. Robinson; Matt A. Wood; C. F. Claver; J. L. Provencal; S. J. Kleinman; P. A. Bradley; Marian Frueh; A. D. Grauer; B. P. Hine; G. Fontaine; N. Achilleos; D. T. Wickramasinghe; T. M. K. Marar; S. Seetha; B. N. Ashoka; D. O'Donoghue; Brian Warner; D. W. Kurtz; Peter Martinez; G. Vauclair; M. Chevreton; M. A. Barstow; A. Kanaan; S. O. Kepler; T. Augusteijn; J. van Paradijs; C. J. Hansen

Time-series photometric observations of the binary star V471 Tauri were conducted using the Whole Earth Telescope observing network. The purpose was to determine the mechanism responsible for causing the 555 and 277 s periodic luminosity variations exhibited by the white dwarf in this binary. Previous observers have proposed that either g-mode pulsations or rotation of an accreting magnetic white dwarf could cause the variations, but were unable to decide which was the correct model. The present observations have answered this question. Learning the cause of the white dwarf variations has been possible because of the discovery of a periodic signal at 562 s in the Johnson U-band flux of the binary. By identifying this signal as reprocessed radiation and using its phase to infer the phase of the shorter wavelength radiation which produces it, made it possible to compare the phase of the 555 s U-band variations to the phase of the X-ray variations. It was found that U-band maximum coincides with X-ray minimum. From this result it was concluded that the magnetic rotator model accurately describes the variations observed, but that models involving g-mode pulsations do not.


Baltic Astronomy | 1998

BPM 37093: The way to the interior of crystallized stars

A. Kanaan; S. O. Kepler; O. Giovannini; D. E. Winget; M. H. Montgomery; A. Nitta

BPM 37093 is a ZZ Ceti type star of the mass ~ 1.1 MQ. Its temperature 11 000 K) and high mass imply that it should be crystallized throughout most of its core, the exact fraction depending on the core composition. BPM 37093 is the first object where the results of crystallization theory can be probed observationally. If the star is crystallized, its pulsation spectrum should differ significantly from non-crystallized pulsating stars. Very high signal-to-noise high speed photometry will enable us to detect very low amplitude (<lmmag) modes. The finding of additional pulsation modes will enable us to better disentangle competing physical processes such as the surface layer masses from the effects of crystallization itself. In this paper we report the observations of BPM 37093 from 1991 till 1997 and present the plan for WET observations in 1998.


Archive | 1991

Whole Earth Telescope Observations of the Interacting White Dwarf Binary System AM CVn: First Results

J.-E. Solheim; P.-I. Emanuelsen; G. Vauclair; N. Dolez; M. Chevreton; M. A. Barstow; A. E. Sansom; R. W. Tweedy; S. O. Kepler; A. Kanaan; G. Fontaine; P. Bergeron; Albert D. Grauer; J. L. Provencal; D. E. Winget; R. E. Nather; P. A. Bradley; C. F. Claver; J. C. Clemens; S. J. Kleinman; B. P. Hine; T. M. K. Marar; S. Seetha; B. N. Ashoka; E. M. Leibowitz; Tsevi Mazeh

We report the first results of the Whole Earth Telescope observations of AM CVn in March/April 1990. The Fourier Spectrum of the light curve shows harmonically related peaks. High frequency sidebands with the fine-splitting of 21 µHz are observed for the fundamental period of 1051 s and its 4 lowest harmonics. These have not been observed before. The fundamental period itself is not detected.

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S. O. Kepler

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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D. E. Winget

University of Texas at Austin

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J. C. Clemens

University of Texas at Austin

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J. L. Provencal

University of Texas at Austin

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P. A. Bradley

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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S. J. Kleinman

University of Texas at Austin

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C. F. Claver

University of Texas at Austin

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R. E. Nather

University of Texas at Austin

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G. Vauclair

University of Toulouse

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G. Fontaine

Université de Montréal

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