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      Pulsating hydrogen-deficient white dwarfs and pre-white dwarfs observed with TESS VI. Asteroseismology of the GW Vir-type central star of the Planetary Nebula NGC 246

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          Abstract

          Significant advances have been achieved through the latest improvements in the photometric observations accomplished by the recent space missions, substantially boosting the study of pulsating stars via asteroseismology. The TESS mission has already proven to be of relevance for pulsating white dwarf and pre-white dwarf stars. We report a detailed asteroseismic analysis of the pulsating PG 1159 star NGC 246 (TIC3905338), the central star of the planetary nebula NGC 246, based on high-precision photometric data gathered by the TESS space mission. We reduced TESS observations of NGC 246 and performed a detailed asteroseismic analysis using fully evolutionary PG 1159 models computed accounting for the complete prior evolution of their progenitors. We constrained the mass of this star by comparing the measured mean period spacing with the average of the computed period spacings of the models and also employed the observed individual periods to search for a seismic stellar model. We extracted 17 periodicities from the TESS light curves from the two sectors where NGC246 was observed. All the oscillation frequencies are associated with g-mode pulsations, with periods spanning from ~1460 to ~1823s. We found a constant period spacing of \(\Delta\Pi= 12.9\)s, allowing us to deduce that the stellar mass is larger than ~0.87 Mo if the period spacing is assumed to be associated with l= 1 modes, and ~ 0.568 Mo if it is associated with l= 2 modes. The less massive models are more consistent with the distance constraint from Gaia parallax. Although we were not able to find a unique asteroseismic model for this star, the period-to-period fit analyses suggest a high-stellar mass (\(\gtrsim\)0.74 Mo) when the observed periods are associated with modes with l= 1 only, and both a high (\(\gtrsim\) 0.74 Mo) and intermediate (~0.57 Mo) stellar mass when the observed periods are associated with modes with l= 1 and 2.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          26 February 2024
          Article
          2402.16642
          f6cb0793-249e-4f5b-924d-ac5579ce58a8

          http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

          History
          Custom metadata
          14 pages, 11 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics
          astro-ph.SR

          Solar & Stellar astrophysics
          Solar & Stellar astrophysics

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