43 research outputs found
Asteroseismic modeling of 16 Cyg A & B using the complete Kepler data set
Asteroseismology of bright stars with well-determined properties from
parallax measurements and interferometry can yield precise stellar ages and
meaningful constraints on the composition. We substantiate this claim with an
updated asteroseismic analysis of the solar-analog binary system 16 Cyg A & B
using the complete 30-month data sets from the Kepler space telescope. An
analysis with the Asteroseismic Modeling Portal (AMP), using all of the
available constraints to model each star independently, yields the same age
( Gyr) and composition (, ) for both stars, as expected for a binary system. We quantify the
accuracy of the derived stellar properties by conducting a similar analysis of
a Kepler-like data set for the Sun, and we investigate how the reliability of
asteroseismic inference changes when fewer observational constraints are
available or when different fitting methods are employed. We find that our
estimates of the initial helium mass fraction are probably biased low by
0.02-0.03 from neglecting diffusion and settling of heavy elements, and we
identify changes to our fitting method as the likely source of small shifts
from our initial results in 2012. We conclude that in the best cases reliable
stellar properties can be determined from asteroseismic analysis even without
independent constraints on the radius and luminosity.Comment: 5 emulateapj pages, 1 table, 1 figure. ApJ Letters, accepte
A study of binary constraints for seismology of delta Scuti stars
Seismology of single delta Scuti stars has mainly been inhibited by failing
to detect many of the theoretically predicted pulsation modes, resulting in
difficulties with mode identification. Theoretical and observational advances
have, however, helped to overcome this problem, but the following questions
then remain: do we know enough about the star to either use the (few)
identified mode(s) to probe the structure of the star? or improve the
determination of the stellar parameters? It is now generally accepted that for
the observed frequencies to be used successfully as seismic probes for these
objects, we need to concentrate on stars where we can constrain the number of
free parameters in the problem, such as in binary systems or open clusters. The
work presented here, investigates how much is gained in our understanding of
the star, by comparing the information we obtain from a single star with that
of an eclipsing binary system. Singular Value Decomposition is the technique
used to explore the precision we expect in terms of stellar parameters (such as
mass, age and chemical composition).Comment: v2: error in equation corrected. HELAS II Conference:
Helioseismology, Asteroseismology and MHD Connections, August 2007
Goettingen, German
Stellar Cruise Control: Weakened Magnetic Braking Leads to Sustained Rapid Rotation of Old Stars
Despite a growing sample of precisely measured stellar rotation periods and
ages, the strength of magnetic braking and the degree of departure from
standard (Skumanich-like) spindown have remained persistent questions,
particularly for stars more evolved than the Sun. Rotation periods can be
measured for stars older than the Sun by leveraging asteroseismology, enabling
models to be tested against a larger sample of old field stars. Because
asteroseismic measurements of rotation do not depend on starspot modulation,
they avoid potential biases introduced by the need for a stellar dynamo to
drive starspot production. Using a neural network trained on a grid of stellar
evolution models and a hierarchical model-fitting approach, we constrain the
onset of weakened magnetic braking. We find that a sample of stars with
asteroseismically-measured rotation periods and ages is consistent with models
that depart from standard spindown prior to reaching the evolutionary stage of
the Sun. We test our approach using neural networks trained on model grids
produced by separate stellar evolution codes with differing physical
assumptions and find that the choices of grid physics can influence the
inferred properties of the braking law. We identify the normalized critical
Rossby number as the
threshold for the departure from standard rotational evolution. This suggests
that weakened magnetic braking poses challenges to gyrochronology for roughly
half of the main sequence lifetime of sun-like stars.Comment: 26 pages, 10 figure
Kepler-21b: A 1.6REarth Planet Transiting the Bright Oscillating F Subgiant Star HD 179070
We present Kepler observations of the bright (V=8.3), oscillating star HD
179070. The observations show transit-like events which reveal that the star is
orbited every 2.8 days by a small, 1.6 R_Earth object. Seismic studies of HD
179070 using short cadence Kepler observations show that HD 179070 has a
frequencypower spectrum consistent with solar-like oscillations that are
acoustic p-modes. Asteroseismic analysis provides robust values for the mass
and radius of HD 179070, 1.34{\pm}0.06 M{\circ} and 1.86{\pm}0.04 R{\circ}
respectively, as well as yielding an age of 2.84{\pm}0.34 Gyr for this F5
subgiant. Together with ground-based follow-up observations, analysis of the
Kepler light curves and image data, and blend scenario models, we
conservatively show at the >99.7% confidence level (3{\sigma}) that the transit
event is caused by a 1.64{\pm}0.04 R_Earth exoplanet in a 2.785755{\pm}0.000032
day orbit. The exoplanet is only 0.04 AU away from the star and our
spectroscopic observations provide an upper limit to its mass of ~10 M_Earth
(2-{\sigma}). HD 179070 is the brightest exoplanet host star yet discovered by
Kepler.Comment: Accepted to Ap
Seismic analysis of four solar-like stars observed during more than eight months by Kepler
Having started science operations in May 2009, the Kepler photometer has been
able to provide exquisite data of solar-like stars. Five out of the 42 stars
observed continuously during the survey phase show evidence of oscillations,
even though they are rather faint (magnitudes from 10.5 to 12). In this paper,
we present an overview of the results of the seismic analysis of 4 of these
stars observed during more than eight months.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure. To appear in the ASP proceedings of "The 61st
Fujihara seminar: Progress in solar/stellar physics with helio- and
asteroseismology", 13th-17th March 2011, Hakone, Japa
Age dating of an early Milky Way merger via asteroseismology of the naked-eye star ν Indi
Over the course of its history, the Milky Way has ingested multiple smaller satellite galaxies1. Although these accreted stellar populations can be forensically identified as kinematically distinct structures within the Galaxy, it is difficult in general to date precisely the age at which any one merger occurred. Recent results have revealed a population of stars that were accreted via the collision of a dwarf galaxy, called Gaia–Enceladus1, leading to substantial pollution of the chemical and dynamical properties of the Milky Way. Here we identify the very bright, naked-eye star ν Indi as an indicator of the age of the early in situ population of the Galaxy. We combine asteroseismic, spectroscopic, astrometric and kinematic observations to show that this metal-poor, alpha-element-rich star was an indigenous member of the halo, and we measure its age to be 11.0±0.7 (stat) ±0.8 (sys) billion years. The star bears hallmarks consistent with having been kinematically heated by the Gaia–Enceladus collision. Its age implies that the earliest the merger could have begun was 11.6 and 13.2 billion years ago, at 68% and 95% confidence, respectively. Computations based on hierarchical cosmological models slightly reduce the above limits