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EXOTIME: searching for planets around pulsating subdwarf B stars
ISSN
0004-640X
Date Issued
2010
Author(s)
Silvotti, Roberto
Lutz, Ronny
Green, Elizabeth M.
Ostensen, Roy H.
Leccia, Silvio
Kim, Seung-Lee
Fontaine, Gilles
Charpinet, Stephane
Francoeur, Myriam
Randall, Suzanna
Rodriguez-Lopez, Cristina
van Grootel, Valerie
Odell, Andrew P.
Paparo, Margit
Bognar, Zsofia
Papics, Peter
Nagel, Thorsten
Hundertmark, Markus
Dall'Ora, Massimo
Mancini, Dario
Cortecchia, Fausto
Benatti, Serena
Claudi, Riccardo
Janulis, Rimvydas
DOI
10.1007/s10509-010-0356-4
Abstract
In 2007, a companion with planetary mass was found around the pulsating subdwarf B star V391 Pegasi with the timing method, indicating that a previously undiscovered population of substellar companions to apparently single subdwarf B stars might exist. Following this serendipitous discovery, the EXOTIME (http://www.na.astro.it/similar to silvotti/exotime/)) monitoring program has been set up to follow the pulsations of a number of selected rapidly pulsating subdwarf B stars on time scales of several years with two immediate observational goals: (1) determine (P)over dot of the pulsational periods P (2) search for signatures of substellar companions in O-C residuals due to periodic light travel time variations, which would be tracking the central star's companion-induced wobble around the centre of mass These sets of data should therefore, at the same time, on the one hand be useful to provide extra constraints for classical asteroseismological exercises from the P. ( comparison with "local" evolutionary models), and on the other hand allow one to investigate the preceding evolution of a target in terms of possible "binary" evolution by extending the otherwise unsuccessful search for companions to potentially very low masses. While timing pulsations may be an observationally expensive method to search for companions, it samples a different range of orbital parameters, inaccessible through orbital photometric effects or the radial velocity method: the latter favours massive close-in companions, whereas the timing method becomes increasingly more sensitive toward wider separations. In this paper we report on the status of the on-going observations and coherence analysis for two of the currently five targets, revealing very well-behaved pulsational characteristics in HS 0444+0458, while showing HS 0702+6043 to be more complex than previously thought.
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