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First considerations on possible preliminary and complementary programmes for the SIAMOIS project Ennio Poretti INAF – Osservatorio Astronomico di Brera. To observe a known Delta Sct or Gamma Dor star from South Pole.
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First considerations on possible preliminary and complementary programmes for the SIAMOIS project Ennio Poretti INAF – Osservatorio Astronomico di Brera
To observe a known Delta Sct or Gamma Dor star from South Pole. The study of these stars by a single instrument operating in a continuous way is a very good starting point and a new observational facility. Hopefully, we can remove of the spurious peaks usually populating the low frequency region (f<5 c/d) of the power spectra of spectroscopic and photometric timeseries. g-modes, which should be present in both types of stars, should beautifully stand up in the power spectra.
What we have as observational background ? Among Delta Sct stars, there are only three candidates Rho Pup F0 Dec -24 V=2.83 v sin i = 15 km/s 51 Sgr A1m -24 5.64 13 Rho Pav A9V -32 4.86 45 Thy are others stars listed in the SIAMOIS webpage (AI Vel, V703 Sco, RS Gru, SX Phe) satisfying the requirements Dec < -30 and v sin i > 40 Km/s, but they are High Amplitude Delta Sct stars (evolved stars, most radial pulsators) Among Gamma Dor stars, there are three candidates Gamma Dor F4III Dec -51 V=4.20 v sini i = 50 km/s HR 2740 F0IV -46 4.50 51 HD 147787 F4IV -64 5.27 spectroscopic binary Not an exciting scenario …
Gamma Dor (itself!) V=4.20, v sin i=50 km/s Balona et al. 1996 ESO, MSSSO, NZ, SAAO Frequencies 1.32, 1.36, 1.47 c/d Amplitudes around 1-2 km/s
HR 2740 Gamma Dor variable V=4.5, v sin i=51 km/s Poretti et al. 1997 , SAAO+ESO campaign Bunch of frequencies very close to 1.0 c/d. The frequency content of Gamma Dor variables is an hard task also for multisite campaigns. SIAMOIS spectral window will be more effective in this context.
Rho Puppis Delta Sct variable V=2.81, v sin i = 15 km/s Dall & Frandsen 2002 1.54 Danish telescope at La Silla DFOSC in echelle mode, R=4300 Line indices of Balmer lines, proportional to EW, thus sensitive to temperature variations. Monoperiodic, radial pulsator. Mathias et al. (1997) suggest the presence of nonradial modes.
51 Sgr = HD 184552 Delta Sct variable 4 hours of photometry in 1991 at ESO 50 cm Hildebrandt 1992 Noted in SIMBAD as a spectroscopic binary
Searching for new ones ? A few numbers …
When considering subgiant and dwarfs with Dec < - 20 we get 25 stars with V < +2 52 stars with 2<V<3 138 stars with 3<V<4 404 stars with 4<V<5 1271 stars with 5<V<6 1890 stars in total Let’s consider subgiant and dwarfs V<6.0 stars with Dec < -30 435 stars Spect. Type < A0 , 217 with a vsini value 285 A0< Spect. Type < F5 , 132 603 Spect. Type > F5 , 19 1323 stars in total, 368 only with an available vsini value …
Preliminary consideration : Too many stars for limited resources Extensive search for photometric variability: - photometric facilities (bright stars) used for COROT are in the North (OSN, SPM, Mercator, …) - availability of photometric telescopes in Australia, New Zealand, South Africa ? - too few targets per nights, a lot of nights Search for spectroscopic characterization: - availability of medium class telescopes (SAAO, ESO,…) but OPCs maybe hard to convince. Put severe constraints on the targets, to choose in a well defined and limited sample (not an easy task anyway…)
Example of a severe constraint: tolimit the search in a restricted area of the HR diagram Example of restricted area : The cold border of the instability strip, where Gamma Dor and Delta Sct are both present, and maybe hybrid pulsator too.
Complementary programme (when SIAMOIS will be operating) Difficult to identify the surviving observational facilities after 2008: - photometric follow up of bright stars could be problematic; - spectroscopic follow up for mode identification with very high S/N spectra will be still feasible, with new instruments too; - extension of the velocity radial measurements during South Pole “day” from Southern Hemisphere (SAAO, ESO, ….)