70 research outputs found
Extracting surface rotation periods of solar-like Kepler targets
We use various method to extract surface rotation periods of Kepler targets
exhibiting solar-like oscillations and compare their results.Comment: Proceedings of the CoRoT3-KASC7 Conference. 2 pages, 1 figur
Understanding angular momentum transport in red giants: the case of KIC 7341231
Context. Thanks to recent asteroseismic observations, it has been possible to
infer the radial differential rotation profile of subgiants and red giants.
Aims. We want to reproduce through modeling the observed rotation profile of
the early red giant KIC 7341231 and constrain the physical mechanisms
responsible for angular momentum transport in stellar interiors.
Methods. We compute models of KIC 7341231 including a treatment of shellular
rotation and we compare the rotation profiles obtained with the one derived by
Deheuvels et al. (2012). We then modify some modeling parameters in order to
quantify their effect on the obtained rotation profile. Moreover, we mimic a
powerful angular momentum transport during the Main Sequence and study its
effect on the evolution of the rotation profile during the subgiant and red
giant phases.
Results. We show that meridional circulation and shear mixing alone produce a
rotation profile for KIC 7341231 too steep compared to the observed one. An
additional mechanism is then needed to increase the internal transport of
angular momentum. We find that this undetermined mechanism has to be efficient
not only during the Main Sequence but also during the much quicker subgiant
phase. Moreover, we point out the importance of studying the whole rotational
history of a star in order to explain its rotation profile during the red giant
evolution.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, 5 table
Investigating magnetic activity of F stars with the it Kepler mission
The dynamo process is believed to drive the magnetic activity of stars like
the Sun that have an outer convection zone. Large spectroscopic surveys showed
that there is a relation between the rotation periods and the cycle periods:
the longer the rotation period is, the longer the magnetic activity cycle
period will be. We present the analysis of F stars observed by Kepler for which
individual p modes have been measure and with surface rotation periods shorter
than 12 days. We defined magnetic indicators and proxies based on photometric
observations to help characterise the activity levels of the stars. With the
Kepler data, we investigate the existence of stars with cycles (regular or
not), stars with a modulation that could be related to magnetic activity, and
stars that seem to show a flat behaviour.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure, proceedings of IAU Symposium 302 'Magnetic fields
through stellar evolution', 25-30 August 2013, Biarritz, Franc
Photospheric and chromospheric magnetic activity of seismic solar analogs. Observational inputs on the solar/stellar connection from Kepler and Hermes
We identify a set of 18 solar analogs among the seismic sample of solar-like
stars observed by the Kepler satellite rotating between 10 and 40 days. This
set is constructed using the asteroseismic stellar properties derived using
either the global oscillation properties or the individual acoustic
frequencies. We measure the magnetic activity properties of these stars using
observations collected by the photometric Kepler satellite and by the
ground-based, high-resolution Hermes spectrograph mounted on the Mercator
telescope. The photospheric (Sph) and chromospheric (S index) magnetic activity
levels of these seismic solar analogs are estimated and compared in relation to
the solar activity. We show that the activity of the Sun is comparable to the
activity of the seismic solar analogs, within the maximum-to-minimum temporal
variations of the 11-year solar activity cycle 23. In agreement with previous
studies, the youngest stars and fastest rotators in our sample are actually the
most active. The activity of stars older than the Sun seems to not evolve much
with age. Furthermore, the comparison of the photospheric, Sph, with the
well-established chromospheric, S index, indicates that the Sph index can be
used to provide a suitable magnetic activity proxy which can be easily
estimated for a large number of stars from space photometric observations.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
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