NASA Logo

NTRS

NTRS - NASA Technical Reports Server

Back to Results
An Analysis of the Rapidly Rotating Bp star HD 133880HD 133880 is a rapidly rotating chemically peculiar B-type (Bp) star (nu sin i approx = 103km/s) and is host to one of the strongest magnetic fields of any Ap/Bp star. A member of the Upper Centaurus Lupus association, it is a star with a well-determined age of 16 Myr. 12 new spectra, four of which are polarimetric, obtained from the FEROS, ESPaDOnS and HARPS instruments, provide sufficient material from which to re-evaluate the magnetic field and obtain a first approximation to the atmospheric abundance distributions of He, O, Mg, Si, Ti. Cr, Fe, Ni, Pr and Nd. An abundance analysis was carried out using ZEEMAN, a program which synthesizes spectral line profiles for stars with permeating magnetic fields. The magnetic field structure was characterized by a colinear multipole expansion from the observed variations of the longitudinal and surface fields with rotational phase. Both magnetic hemispheres are clearly visible during the stellar rotation, and thus a three-ring abundance distribution model encompassing both magnetic poles and magnetic equator with equal spans in colatitude was adopted. Using the new magnetic field measurements and optical photometry together with previously published data, we refine the period of HD 133880 to P = 0.877 476 +/- 0.000009 d. Our simple axisymmetric magnetic field model is based on a predominantly quadrupolar component that roughly describes the field variations. Using spectrum synthesis, we derived mean abundances for O, Mg, Si, Ti, Cr, Fe and Pr. All elements; except Mg, are overabundant compared to the Son. Mg appears to be approximately uniform over the stellar surface, while all other elements are more abundant in the negative magnetic hemisphere than in the positive magnetic hemisphere. In contrast to most Ap/Bp stars which show an underabundance in 0, in HD 133880 this element is clearly overabundant compared to the solar abundance ratio. In studying the Ha and Paschen lines in the optical spectra, we could not unambiguously detect information about the magnetosphere of HD 133880. However, radio emission data at both 3 and 6 cm suggest that the magnetospheric plasma is held in rigid rotation with the star by the magnetic field and further supported against collapse by the rapid rotation. Subtle differences in the shapes of the optically thick radio light curves at 3 and 6 cm suggest that the large-scale magnetic field is not fully axisymmetric at large distances from the star.
Document ID
20120016483
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Bailey, J. D.
(University of Western Ontario London, Ontario, Canada)
Grunhut, J.
(Royal Military Coll. of Canada Kingston, Ontario, Canada)
Shultz, M.
(Royal Military Coll. of Canada Kingston, Ontario, Canada)
Wade, G.
(Royal Military Coll. of Canada Kingston, Ontario, Canada)
Landstreet, J. D.
(University of Western Ontario London, Ontario, Canada)
Bohlender, D.
(Herzberg Inst. of Astrophysics Victoria, British Columbia, Canada)
Lim, J.
(Hong Kong Univ. Hong Kong)
Wong, K.
(Hong Kong Univ. Hong Kong)
Drake, S.
(Universities Space Research Association Greenbelt, MD, United States)
Linsky, J.
(Colorado Univ. Boulder, CO, United States)
Date Acquired
August 26, 2013
Publication Date
June 1, 2012
Publication Information
Publication: Monthly Notes of the Royal Astronomical Society
Volume: 423
Issue: 1
Subject Category
Astronomy
Report/Patent Number
GSFC.JA.7330.2012
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
No Preview Available