Bibcode
Aerts, C.; Simón-Díaz, S.; Groot, P. J.; Degroote, P.
Referencia bibliográfica
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 569, id.A118, 12 pp.
Fecha de publicación:
9
2014
Revista
Número de citas
47
Número de citas referidas
42
Descripción
Context. The Fourier transform method is a popular tool for deriving the
rotational velocities of stars from their spectral line profiles.
However, its domain of validity does not include line-profile variables
with time-dependent profiles. Aims: We investigate the
performance of the method for such cases, by interpreting the
line-profile variations of spotted B stars and of pulsating B stars, as
if their spectral lines were caused by uniform surface rotation along
with macroturbulence. Methods: We perform time-series analysis
and harmonic least-squares fitting of various line diagnostics and of
the outcome of several implementations of the Fourier transform method.
Results: We find that the projected rotational velocities derived
from the Fourier transform vary appreciably during the pulsation cycle
whenever the pulsational and rotational velocity fields have similar
magnitudes. The macroturbulent velocities derived while ignoring the
pulsations can vary by tens of km s-1 during the pulsation
cycle. The temporal behaviour of the deduced rotational and
macroturbulent velocities are in antiphase with each other. The
rotational velocity is in phase with the second moment of the line
profiles. Conclusions: The application of the Fourier method to
stars with considerable pulsational line broadening may lead to an
appreciable spread in the values of the rotation velocity, and, by
implication, of the deduced value of the macroturbulence. These two
quantities should therefore not be derived from single snapshot spectra
if the aim is to use them as a solid diagnostic evaluating stellar
evolution models of slow-to-moderate rotators.
The spectroscopic time series used in this paper, along with many
others, are available from http://newton.ster.kuleuven.be/~roy/helas/
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Simón Díaz