Radial velocity variability fractions of different types of hot subdwarf stars
Abstract
Different types of hot subdwarfs may have different origins, which will cause them to present different radial velocity (RV) variability properties. Only 64% of our single-lined He-rich hot subdwarfs that only show spectroscopic features of hot subdwarfs are found to be RV variable, which is lower than the fraction of single-lined He-poor sdB stars (313%). Single-lined sdB stars with effective temperatures (T eff) 25,000 - 33,000 K show an RV-variability fraction of 345%, while lower RV-variability fractions are observed for single-lined sdB stars cooler than about 25,000 K (114%), single-lined sdB/OB stars with T eff 33,000 - 40,000 K and surface gravities about 5.7 - 6.0 (133%), as well as single-lined sdO/B stars with T eff 45,000 - 70,000 K (107%). Single-lined hot subdwarfs with T eff 35,000 - 45,000 K located above the extreme horizontal branch (EHB) show a similar RV-variability fraction of 349% as single-lined sdB stars at about 25,000 - 33,000 K. The largest RV-variability fraction of 518% is found in single-lined hot subdwarfs below the canonical EHB. The detected RV-variability fraction of our composite hot subdwarfs with an infrared excess in their spectral energy distributions is 93%, which is lower than that fraction of single-lined hot subdwarfs. Since the average RV uncertainty we measured in the LAMOST spectra is about 7.0 km/s, the lower detected RV-variability fraction for composite hot subdwarfs is expected because the RV amplitudes associated with long-period systems are lower.
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