Authors:
Ostensen, RH; Bloemen, S; Vuckovic, M; Aerts, C; Oreiro, R; Kinemuchi, K; Still, M; Koester, D
Abstract:
We present the discovery of the first-and so far the only-pulsating white dwarf star located in the field of view of the Kepler spacecraft. During our ongoing effort to search for compact pulsator candidates that can benefit from the near-continuous coverage of Kepler, we recently identified a faint DB star from spectroscopy obtained with the William Herschel Telescope. After establishing its physical parameters to be T(eff) = 24,950 K and log g = 7.91 dex, placing it right in the middle of the V777 Her instability strip, we immediately submitted the target for follow-up space observations. The Kepler light curve reveals a pulsation spectrum consisting of five modes that follow a sequence roughly equally spaced in period with a mean spacing of 37 s. The three strongest modes show a triplet structure with a mean splitting of 3.3 mu Hz. We conclude that this object is a V777 Her pulsator with a mass of similar to 0.56 M(circle dot), and very similar to the class prototype.
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