1,467 research outputs found
Stellar granulation and interferometry
Stars are not smooth. Their photosphere is covered by a granulation pattern
associated with the heat transport by convection. The convection-related
surface structures have different size, depth, and temporal variations with
respect to the stellar type. The related activity (in addition to other
phenomena such as magnetic spots, rotation, dust, etc.) potentially causes bias
in stellar parameters determination, radial velocity, chemical abundances
determinations, and exoplanet transit detections.
The role of long-baseline interferometric observations in this astrophysical
context is crucial to characterize the stellar surface dynamics and correct the
potential biases. In this Chapter, we present how the granulation pattern is
expected for different kind of stellar types ranging from main sequence to
extremely evolved stars of different masses and how interferometric techniques
help to study their photospheric dynamics.Comment: To appear in the Book of the VLTI School 2013, held 9-21 Sep 2013
Barcelonnette (France), "What the highest angular resolution can bring to
stellar astrophysics?", Ed. Millour, Chiavassa, Bigot, Chesneau, Meilland,
Stee, EAS Publications Series (2015
Theoretical light curves of dipole oscillations in roAp stars
Context.
The dipole modes are the most common geometry of oscillations in roAp stars inferred from photometric measurements and are therefore of special interest for asteroseismic purposes.
Aims.
We present a theoretical and analytical study of the light curves associated with dipole (â„“ = 1) pulsations of roAp stars in the framework of the revisited oblique pulsator model.
Methods.
We describe the light curves in terms of the inclination and polarization of the elliptical displacement vector of the dipole modes. We study the influence of the magnetic field and rotation on the shape of these light curves for both amplitudes and phases.
Results.
Despite the inclination of dipole mode with respect to the magnetic axis, we find that the dipole mode can have maxima that are in phase with the magnetic maxima. We apply our formalism to the well-known roAp star HR 3831 (HD 83368) to derive its mode properties. Our results are similar to those obtained by time-series spectroscopy. We also consider the cases of three other roAp stars, HD 6532, HD 99563, and HD 128898 (α Cir).
Conclusions.
We demonstrate that the formalism of the revisited oblique pulsator model is adequate to explain the properties of the photometric light curves associated with dipole modes in roAp stars. In addition, we show that the coincidence of pulsation and magnetic extrema can also occur for inclined modes with respect to the magnetic axis. With the stars considered in this paper, we conclude that the polarization of the modes present in roAp stars are quasi linearly polarized
Adaptive Covariance Estimation with model selection
We provide in this paper a fully adaptive penalized procedure to select a
covariance among a collection of models observing i.i.d replications of the
process at fixed observation points. For this we generalize previous results of
Bigot and al. and propose to use a data driven penalty to obtain an oracle
inequality for the estimator. We prove that this method is an extension to the
matricial regression model of the work by Baraud
Un micromilieu important de Camargue les coquilles vides de mollusques
Bigot Louis. Un micromilieu important de Camargue : les coquilles vides de mollusques . In: La Terre et La Vie, Revue d'Histoire naturelle, tome 11, n°2-3, 1957. pp. 211-230
Asteroseismic Theory of Rapidly Oscillating Ap Stars
This paper reviews some of the important advances made over the last decade
concerning theory of roAp stars.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
A large sample of calibration stars for Gaia: log g from Kepler and CoRoT
Asteroseismic data can be used to determine surface gravities with precisions
of < 0.05 dex by using the global seismic quantities Deltanu and nu_max along
with Teff and [Fe/H]. Surface gravity is also one of the four stellar
properties to be derived by automatic analyses for 1 billion stars from Gaia
data (workpackage GSP_Phot). We explore seismic data from MS F, G, K stars
(solar-like stars) observed by Kepler as a potential calibration source for
methods that Gaia will use for object characterisation (log g). We calculate
log g for bright nearby stars for which radii and masses are known, and using
their global seismic quantities in a grid-based method, we determine an
asteroseismic log g to within 0.01 dex of the direct calculation, thus
validating the accuracy of our method. We find that errors in Teff and mainly
[Fe/H] can cause systematic errors of 0.02 dex. We then apply our method to a
list of 40 stars to deliver precise values of surface gravity, i.e. sigma <
0.02 dex, and we find agreement with recent literature values. Finally, we
explore the precision we expect in a sample of 400+ Kepler stars which have
their global seismic quantities measured. We find a mean uncertainty
(precision) on the order of <0.02 dex in log g over the full explored range 3.8
< log g < 4.6, with the mean value varying only with stellar magnitude (0.01 -
0.02 dex). We study sources of systematic errors in log g and find possible
biases on the order of 0.04 dex, independent of log g and magnitude, which
accounts for errors in the Teff and [Fe/H] measurements, as well as from using
a different grid-based method. We conclude that Kepler stars provide a wealth
of reliable information that can help to calibrate methods that Gaia will use,
in particular, for source characterisation with GSP_Phot where excellent
precision (small uncertainties) and accuracy in log g is obtained from seismic
data.Comment: Accepted MNRAS, 15 pages (10 figures and 3 tables), v2=some rewording
of two sentence
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