Linear analyses for the stability of radial and nonradial oscillations of massive stars

Abstract

In order to understand the periodic and semi-periodic variations of luminous O- B- A-type stars, linear nonadiabatic stability analyses for radial and nonradial oscillations have been performed for massive evolutionary models (8M - 90M). In addition to radial and nonradial oscillations excited by the kappa-mechanism and strange-mode instability, we discuss the importance of low-degree oscillatory convection (nonadiabatic g-) modes. Although their kinetic energy is largely confined to the convection zone generated by the Fe opacity peak near 2×105K, the amplitude can emerge to the photosphere and should be observable in a certain effective temperature range. They have periods longer than those of the radial strange modes so that they seem to be responsible for some of the long-period microvariations of LBVs (S Dor variables) and α Cyg variables. Moreover, monotonously unstable radial modes are found in some models whose initial masses are greater than or equal to 60M with Z=0.02. The monotonous instability probably corresponds to the presence of an optically thick wind. The instability boundary roughly coincides with the Humphreys-Davidson limit.

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