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High-Precision Studies of Compact Variable Stars

English · Hardback

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Description

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This book, which is a reworked and updated version of Steven Bloemen's original PhD thesis, reports on several high-precision studies of compact variable stars. Its strength lies in the large variety of observational, theoretical and instrumentation techniques that are presented and used and paves the way towards new and detailed asteroseismic applications of single and binary subdwarf stars. Close binary stars are studied using high cadence spectroscopic datasets collected with state of the art electron multiplying CCDs and analysed using Doppler tomography visualization techniques. The work touches upon instrumentation, presenting the calibration of a new fast, multi-colour camera installed at the Mercator Telescope on La Palma. The thesis also includes theoretical work on the computation of the temperature range in which stellar oscillations can be driven in subdwarf B-stars. Finally, the highlight of the thesis is the measurement of velocities of stars using only photometric data from NASA's Kepler satellite. Doppler beaming causes stars to appear slightly brighter when they move towards us in their orbits, and this subtle effect can be seen in Kepler's brightness measurements. The thesis presents the first validation of such velocity measurements using independent spectroscopic measurements. Since the detection and validation of this Doppler beaming effect, it has been used in tens of studies to detect and characterize binary star systems, which are key calibrators in stellar astronomy.

List of contents

Introduction.- Spin-resolved spectroscopy of the intermediate polar DQ Her.- Spectral variability on the spin period of the white dwarf in V455 And.- Kepler observations of the beaming binary KPD1946+4340.- Doppler beaming and Rømer delay in the Kepler data of KOI-74.- A new grid of evolutionary sdB models and their pulsational properties.- MAIA: the Mercator Advanced Imager for Asteroseismology.- Conclusions and future prospects.

About the author

Steven Bloemen received his PhD from the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven where he performed research for his doctoral thesis in the group of and under supervision of Prof. Conny Aerts.

Summary

This book, which is a reworked and updated version of Steven Bloemen’s original PhD thesis, reports on several high-precision studies of compact variable stars. Its strength lies in the large variety of observational, theoretical and instrumentation techniques that are presented and used and paves the way towards new and detailed asteroseismic applications of single and binary subdwarf stars. Close binary stars are studied using high cadence spectroscopic datasets collected with state of the art electron multiplying CCDs and analysed using Doppler tomography visualization techniques. The work touches upon instrumentation, presenting the calibration of a new fast, multi-colour camera installed at the Mercator Telescope on La Palma. The thesis also includes theoretical work on the computation of the temperature range in which stellar oscillations can be driven in subdwarf B-stars. Finally, the highlight of the thesis is the measurement of velocities of stars using only photometric data from NASA's Kepler satellite. Doppler beaming causes stars to appear slightly brighter when they move towards us in their orbits, and this subtle effect can be seen in Kepler's brightness measurements. The thesis presents the first validation of such velocity measurements using independent spectroscopic measurements. Since the detection and validation of this Doppler beaming effect, it has been used in tens of studies to detect and characterize binary star systems, which are key calibrators in stellar astronomy.

Product details

Authors Steven Bloemen
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 21.07.2014
 
EAN 9783319102825
ISBN 978-3-31-910282-5
No. of pages 132
Dimensions 162 mm x 243 mm x 6 mm
Weight 338 g
Illustrations XV, 132 p. 61 illus., 25 illus. in color.
Series Springer Theses
Springer Theses
Subject Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Physics, astronomy > Astronomy

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