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Main Authors: Aliçavuş, F. Kahraman, Handler, G., Chowdhury, S., Niemczura, E., Jayaraman, R., De Cat, P., Ozuyar, D., Aliçavuş, F.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2404.16988
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author Aliçavuş, F. Kahraman
Handler, G.
Chowdhury, S.
Niemczura, E.
Jayaraman, R.
De Cat, P.
Ozuyar, D.
Aliçavuş, F.
author_facet Aliçavuş, F. Kahraman
Handler, G.
Chowdhury, S.
Niemczura, E.
Jayaraman, R.
De Cat, P.
Ozuyar, D.
Aliçavuş, F.
contents There are different classes of pulsating stars in the H-R diagram. While many of those classes are undisputed, some remain a mystery such as the objects historically called "Maia variables". Whereas the presence of such a class was suggested seven decades ago, no pulsational driving mechanism is known that could excite short-period oscillations in these late B to early A-type stars. Alternative hypotheses that would render the reports of variability of those stars erroneous have been proposed such as incorrect effective temperatures, binarity or rapid rotation, but no certain conclusions have been reached yet. Therefore the existence of these variables as a homogeneous class of pulsating star is still under discussion. Meanwhile, many new candidates of these variables have been claimed especially by using photometric observations of space telescopes. In this study, we examined 31 objects that are alleged members of this hypothetical group and carried out detailed spectroscopic and photometric analyses to test the proposed hypotheses for their cause of variability. The Teff, log g, v sin i, and chemical abundances of the targets were determined and the TESS photometric data were examined. As a result, we found that most of these targets are located inside the delta Scuti, beta Cep, or SPB star instability strips, a few show evidence for binarity and others for rapid rotation. We give arguments that none of the apparently rapid pulsations in our targets is caused by a star outside any known instability strip. By extrapolation, we argue that most stars proposed as pulsators outside well-established instability domains are misclassified. Hence there is no sufficient evidence justifying the existence of a class of pulsating stars formerly known as the "Maia variables".
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2404_16988
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle On the Existence of "Maia variables"
Aliçavuş, F. Kahraman
Handler, G.
Chowdhury, S.
Niemczura, E.
Jayaraman, R.
De Cat, P.
Ozuyar, D.
Aliçavuş, F.
Solar and Stellar Astrophysics
There are different classes of pulsating stars in the H-R diagram. While many of those classes are undisputed, some remain a mystery such as the objects historically called "Maia variables". Whereas the presence of such a class was suggested seven decades ago, no pulsational driving mechanism is known that could excite short-period oscillations in these late B to early A-type stars. Alternative hypotheses that would render the reports of variability of those stars erroneous have been proposed such as incorrect effective temperatures, binarity or rapid rotation, but no certain conclusions have been reached yet. Therefore the existence of these variables as a homogeneous class of pulsating star is still under discussion. Meanwhile, many new candidates of these variables have been claimed especially by using photometric observations of space telescopes. In this study, we examined 31 objects that are alleged members of this hypothetical group and carried out detailed spectroscopic and photometric analyses to test the proposed hypotheses for their cause of variability. The Teff, log g, v sin i, and chemical abundances of the targets were determined and the TESS photometric data were examined. As a result, we found that most of these targets are located inside the delta Scuti, beta Cep, or SPB star instability strips, a few show evidence for binarity and others for rapid rotation. We give arguments that none of the apparently rapid pulsations in our targets is caused by a star outside any known instability strip. By extrapolation, we argue that most stars proposed as pulsators outside well-established instability domains are misclassified. Hence there is no sufficient evidence justifying the existence of a class of pulsating stars formerly known as the "Maia variables".
title On the Existence of "Maia variables"
topic Solar and Stellar Astrophysics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2404.16988