A study of X-ray emission from Ap and Am stars.
Abstract
Twenty stars classified as either Ap or Am have been imaged by the Imaging Proportional Counter on the Einstein Observatory in a search for evidence of coronal emission. It is found that an Am star will not be a source (at the 10 to the 28th ergs/sec level) unless it is in a spectroscopic binary with a period below about 10 days. The X-rays in the close binaries can be explained by the RS CVn effect in the late-type secondary, and the evidence is against strong emission from Am stars. Among the nine Ap stars observed, four were detected. While it is possible that the X-rays are being generated by undetected late-type dwarf companions, the large fraction of detections makes the Ap stars themselves the likely source of emission.
- Publication:
-
The Astrophysical Journal
- Pub Date:
- December 1982
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 1982ApJ...263L..59C
- Keywords:
-
- A Stars;
- Binary Stars;
- Stellar Coronas;
- X Ray Sources;
- X Ray Stars;
- Astronomical Spectroscopy;
- Companion Stars;
- Dwarf Stars;
- Late Stars;
- Peculiar Stars;
- Astronomy;
- A Stars:X-Ray Binaries;
- Ap Stars:X Rays;
- Stellar Coronae:X Rays