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Post Info TOPIC: 1SWASP J162842.31+101416.7


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1SWASP J162842.31+101416.7
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Title: WASP 1628+10 - an EL CVn-type binary with a very-low-mass stripped-red-giant star and multi-periodic pulsations
Author: P. F. L. Maxted (1), A. M. Serenelli (2), T. R. Marsh (3), S. Catalán (3), D. P. Mahtani (1), V. S. Dhillon (4) ((1) Keele, UK, (2) CSIC-IEEC, Spain, (3) Warwick, UK, (4) Sheffield, UK)

The star 1SWASP J162842.31+101416.7 (WASP 1628+10) is one of several EL CVn-type stars recently identified using the WASP database, i.e., an eclipsing binary star in which an A-type dwarf star (WASP 1628+10A) eclipses the remnant of a disrupted red giant star (WASP1628+10B). We have measured the masses, radii and luminosities of the stars in WASP 1628+10 using photometry obtained in three bands (u', g', r') with the Ultracam instrument and medium-resolution spectroscopy. The properties of the remnant are well-matched by models for stars in a rarely-observed state evolving to higher effective temperatures at nearly constant luminosity prior to becoming a very low-mass white dwarf composed almost entirely of helium, i.e., we confirm that WASP 1628+10B is a pre-He-WD. WASP 1628+10A appears to be a normal A2V star with a mass of 1.36±0.05 solar masses. By fitting models to the spectrum of this star around the H line we find that it has an effective temperature Teff,A=7500±200K and a metallicity [Fe/H]=-0.3±0.3. The mass of WASP 1628+10B is only 0.135±0.02 solar masses. The effective temperature of this pre-He-WD is approximately 9200K. The Ultracam photometry of WASP 1628+10 shows variability at several frequencies around 40 cycles per day, which is typical for Sct-type pulsations often observed in early A-type stars like WASP 1628+10A. We also observe frequencies near 114 cycles/day and 129 cycles/day, much higher than the frequencies normally seen in Sct stars. Additional photometry through the primary eclipse will be required to confirm that these higher frequencies are due to pulsations in WASP 1628+10B. If confirmed, this would be only the second known example of a pre-He-WD showing high-frequency pulsations.

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