Discovery of a variable lead-rich hot subdwarf: UVO 0825+15
Abstract
UVO0825+15 is a hot bright helium-rich subdwarf which lies in K2 Field 5 and in a sample of intermediate helium-rich subdwarfs observed with Subaru/HDS. The K2 light curve shows low-amplitude variations, whilst the Subaru spectrum shows Pb iv absorption lines, indicative of a very high lead overabundance. UVO0825+15 also has a high proper motion with kinematics typical for a thick disk star. Analyses of ultraviolet and intermediate dispersion optical spectra rule out a short-period binary companion, and provide fundamental atmospheric parameters of T off=38\,900270\,K, g/ cm\,s-2=5.970.11, n He/n H=-0.570.01, EB-V≈0.03, and angular radius θ = 1.0620.006×10-11 radians (formal errors). The high-resolution spectrum shows that carbon is >2 dex subsolar, iron is approximately solar and all other elements heavier than argon are at least 2 -- 4 dex overabundant, including germanium, yttrium and lead. Approximately 150 lines in the blue-optical spectrum remain unidentified. The chemical structure of the photosphere is presumed to be determined by radiatively-dominated diffusion. The K2 light curve shows a dominant period around 10.8\,h, with a variable amplitude, its first harmonic, and another period at 13.3\,h. The preferred explanation is multi-periodic non-radial oscillation due to g-modes with very high radial order, although this presents difficulties for pulsation theory. Alternative explanations fail for lack of radial-velocity evidence. UVO0825+15 represents the fourth member of a group of hot subdwarfs having helium-enriched photospheres and 3--4 dex overabundances of trans-iron elements, and is the first lead-rich subdwarf to show evidence of pulsations.
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