The enigmatic He-sdB pulsator LS IV-14116: new insights from the VLT
Abstract
The intermediate Helium subdwarf B star LS IV-14116 is a unique object showing extremely peculiar atmospheric abundances as well as long-period pulsations that cannot be explained in terms of the usual opacity mechanism. One hypothesis invoked was that a strong magnetic field may be responsible. We discredit this possibility on the basis of FORS2 spectro-polarimetry, which allows us to rule out a mean longitudinal magnetic field down to 300 G. Using the same data, we derive the atmospheric parameters for LS IV-14116 to be T eff = 35,150111 K, g = 5.880.02 and N( He)/N( H) = -0.620.01. The high surface gravity in particular is at odds with the theory that LS IV-14116 has not yet settled onto the Helium Main Sequence, and that the pulsations are excited by an ε mechanism acting on the Helium-burning shells present after the main Helium flash. Archival UVES spectroscopy reveals LS IV-14116 to have a radial velocity of 149.12.1 km/s. Running a full kinematic analysis, we find that it is on a retrograde orbit around the Galactic centre, with a Galactic radial velocity component U=13.238.28 km/s and a Galactic rotational velocity component V=-55.5622.13 km/s. This implies that LS IV-14116 belongs to the halo population, an intriguing discovery.