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Short-term variability and mass loss in Be stars III. BRITE and SMEI satellite photometry of 28 Cygni

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Author(s):
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Baade, D. ; Pigulski, A. ; Rivinius, Th. ; Carciofi, A. C. ; Panoglou, D. ; Ghoreyshi, M. R. ; Handler, G. ; Kuschnig, R. ; Moffat, A. F. J. ; Pablo, H. ; Popowicz, A. ; Wade, G. A. ; Weiss, W. W. ; Zwintz, K.
Total Authors: 14
Document type: Journal article
Source: ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS; v. 610, p. 17-pg., 2018-03-05.
Abstract

Context. Be stars are important reference laboratories for the investigation of viscous Keplerian discs. In some cases, the disc feeder mechanism involves a combination of non-radial pulsation (NRP) modes. Aims. We seek to understand whether high-cadence photometry can shed further light on the role of NRP modes in facilitating rotation-supported mass loss. Methods. The BRITE-Constellation of nanosatellites obtained mmag photometry of 28 Cygni for 11 months in 2014-2016. We added observations with the Solar Mass Ejection Imager (SMEI) in 2003-2010 and 118 H alpha line profiles, half of which were from 2016. Results. For decades, 28 Cyg has exhibited four large-amplitude frequencies: two closely spaced frequencies of spectroscopically confirmed g modes near 1.5 c/d, one slightly lower exophotospheric (Stefl) frequency, and at 0.05 c/d the difference (Delta) frequency between the two g modes. This top-level framework is indistinguishable from eta Cen (Paper I), which is also very similar in spectral type, rotation rate, and viewing angle. The circumstellar (Stefl) frequency alone does not seem to be affected by the Delta frequency. The amplitude of the Delta frequency undergoes large variations; around maximum the amount of near-circumstellar matter is increased and the amplitude of the Stefl frequency grows by a factor of a few. During such brightenings dozens of transient spikes appear in the frequency spectrum; these spikes are concentrated into three groups. Only 11 frequencies were common to all years of BRITE observations. Conclusions. Be stars seem to be controlled by several coupled clocks, most of which are not very regular on timescales of weeks to months but function for decades. The combination of g modes to the slow Delta variability and/or the atmospheric response to it appears significantly non-linear. As in eta Cen, the Delta variability seems to be mainly responsible for the modulation of the star-to-disc mass transfer in 28 Cyg. A hierarchical set of Delta frequencies may reach the longest known timescales of the Be phenomenon. (AU)

FAPESP's process: 15/17967-7 - Viscous decretion disks: theory and observations
Grantee:Alex Cavaliéri Carciofi
Support Opportunities: Regular Research Grants