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Hauptverfasser: Guzik, Joyce A., Kloppenborg, Brian, Richardson, Noel, Jackiewicz, Jason, Morrison, Nancy, Calderwood, Tom, Pigulski, Andrzej
Format: Preprint
Veröffentlicht: 2025
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Online-Zugang:https://arxiv.org/abs/2503.20058
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author Guzik, Joyce A.
Kloppenborg, Brian
Richardson, Noel
Jackiewicz, Jason
Morrison, Nancy
Calderwood, Tom
Pigulski, Andrzej
author_facet Guzik, Joyce A.
Kloppenborg, Brian
Richardson, Noel
Jackiewicz, Jason
Morrison, Nancy
Calderwood, Tom
Pigulski, Andrzej
contents Deneb, the prototype Alpha Cygni variable, is a bright A2 Ia supergiant which shows irregular variability with a 12-day quasi-period, presumed to be caused by pulsations. At the 2023 AAVSO Annual Meeting we discussed radial velocity and photometry data from several sources showing that the 12-day variations begin abruptly at an arbitrary phase, damp out after several cycles, and resume at intervals of around 75 days. Additional data with more frequent time sampling and longer time series were needed to verify the existence and precision of the 75-day interval. We have identified additional data sets and have intensified ground-based observing programs. Here we present analysis of 1) an 8.6-year photometric data set from the Solar Mass Ejection Imager; 2) BRITE Constellation light curves from six observing seasons of 60 to 180 days each, 2014-2021; 3) 4.6 years of radial velocity data from Morrison; 4) 1.4 years of radial velocity data from Eaton; and 5) additional V-band photometry from the AAVSO Photoelectric Photometry (PEP) section. Examining the SMEI data set, we find a most common 100 to 125 day interval between `pulsation' resumptions. These resumptions sometimes skip intervals. We also find sudden large excursions in brightness and radial velocity which are distinct from the `pulsation' resumptions and may or may not be data artifacts. We point out changes in the average level of Deneb's radial velocity which appear to be real given the accuracy of the measurements but are not explained.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2503_20058
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Abrupt Pulsation Resumptions in Deneb: An Update
Guzik, Joyce A.
Kloppenborg, Brian
Richardson, Noel
Jackiewicz, Jason
Morrison, Nancy
Calderwood, Tom
Pigulski, Andrzej
Solar and Stellar Astrophysics
Deneb, the prototype Alpha Cygni variable, is a bright A2 Ia supergiant which shows irregular variability with a 12-day quasi-period, presumed to be caused by pulsations. At the 2023 AAVSO Annual Meeting we discussed radial velocity and photometry data from several sources showing that the 12-day variations begin abruptly at an arbitrary phase, damp out after several cycles, and resume at intervals of around 75 days. Additional data with more frequent time sampling and longer time series were needed to verify the existence and precision of the 75-day interval. We have identified additional data sets and have intensified ground-based observing programs. Here we present analysis of 1) an 8.6-year photometric data set from the Solar Mass Ejection Imager; 2) BRITE Constellation light curves from six observing seasons of 60 to 180 days each, 2014-2021; 3) 4.6 years of radial velocity data from Morrison; 4) 1.4 years of radial velocity data from Eaton; and 5) additional V-band photometry from the AAVSO Photoelectric Photometry (PEP) section. Examining the SMEI data set, we find a most common 100 to 125 day interval between `pulsation' resumptions. These resumptions sometimes skip intervals. We also find sudden large excursions in brightness and radial velocity which are distinct from the `pulsation' resumptions and may or may not be data artifacts. We point out changes in the average level of Deneb's radial velocity which appear to be real given the accuracy of the measurements but are not explained.
title Abrupt Pulsation Resumptions in Deneb: An Update
topic Solar and Stellar Astrophysics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2503.20058