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Astron. Astrophys. 346, 491-500 (1999)
The chemical composition of the pulsating helium star V652 Her *
C. Simon Jeffery 1,
Philip W. Hill 2 and
Ulrich Heber 3
1 Armagh Observatory, College Hill, Armagh BT61 9DG, Ireland
2 Department of Physics and Astronomy, St. Andrews University, St Andrews, Fife KY16 9SS, Scotland
3 Dr. Remeis-Sternwarte, Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, D-96049 Bamberg, Germany
Received 14 January 1999 / Accepted 31 March 1999
Abstract
We present an analysis of an optical blue spectrum of the pulsating
helium star V652 Her (=BD+ ) in order
to determine its effective temperature, surface gravity and chemical
composition. By fitting synthetic spectra to the observations we find
that for our spectrum ,
(cgs) and
km s-1. The surface
gravity, together with a previous measurement of the stellar radius,
indicates the mass of V652 Her to be .
The surface composition is characterised by abundances of
and
(number fractions). These abundances represent a mixture of some
hydrogen-rich material (0.2% by mass) with predominantly CNO-processed
helium (99.8% by mass). The metallicity of V652 Her, represented by
the N abundance as a sum of primordial C+N+O abundances, by the iron
abundance, and by other metals, corresponds to a near-solar mixture,
with [Fe/H] . Such a metallicity
supports the contention that Z-bump opacities drive pulsations in
metal-rich helium stars in an instability finger that extends to low
luminosities for stars with K. There
is no evidence for the products of any nuclear processes other than
the CNO cycle on the stellar surface. If V652 Her was formed by the
merger of two white dwarfs, its surface composition demands that they
should both be helium white dwarfs. Conversely, if it is the product
of single-star evolution, it is more likely to be a post-giant branch
star. In either case it is probably evolving onto the helium
main-sequence, with important consequences for understanding the
origin of hot subluminous stars. A small discrepancy remains between
and
measured from the average
blue-visual spectrum in this paper, and that measured from UV-optical
spectrophotometry previously. Further work will be necessary to
resolve this, and to make progress in determining the mass of
V652 Her.
Key words: stars: individual:
V652 Her
stars: chemically
peculiar
stars: abundances
* Based on observations obtained at the Anglo-Australian Telescope, Coonabarabran, NSW, Australia.
Send offprint requests to: C.S. Jeffery
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© European Southern Observatory (ESO) 1999
Online publication: May 21, 1999
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