416 research outputs found

    Asteroseismology of Solar-Type and Red-Giant Stars

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    We are entering a golden era for stellar physics driven by satellite and telescope observations of unprecedented quality and scope. New insights on stellar evolution and stellar interiors physics are being made possible by asteroseismology, the study of stars by the observation of natural, resonant oscillations. Asteroseismology is proving to be particularly significant for the study of solar-type and red-giant stars. These stars show rich spectra of solar-like oscillations, which are excited and intrinsically damped by turbulence in the outermost layers of the convective envelopes. In this review we discuss the current state of the field, with a particular emphasis on recent advances provided by the Kepler and CoRoT space missions and the wider significance to astronomy of the results from asteroseismology, such as stellar populations studies and exoplanet studies.Comment: The following paper will appear in the 2013 volume of Annual Reviews of Astronomy and Astrophysics (88 pages, 7 figures; references updated; further corrections to typos during galley-proof review

    The more the merrier: grid based modelling of Kepler dwarfs with 5-dimensional stellar grids

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    We present preliminary results of our grid based modelling (GBM) of the dwarf/subgiant sample of stars observed with Kepler including global asteroseismic parameters. GBM analysis in this work is based on a large grid of stellar models that is characterized by five independent parameters: model mass and age, initial metallicity (\zini), initial helium (\yini), and mixing length parameter (αmlt\alpha_{mlt}). Using this grid relaxes assumptions used in all previous GBM work where the initial composition is determined by a single parameter and that αmlt\alpha_{mlt} is fixed to a solar-calibrated value. The new grid allows us to study, for example, the impact of different galactic chemical enrichment models on the determination of stellar parameters such as mass radius and age. Also, it allows to include new results from stellar atmosphere models on αmlt\alpha_{mlt} in the GBM analysis in a simple manner. Alternatively, it can be tested if global asteroseismology is a useful tool to constraint our ignorance on quantities such as \yini and αmlt\alpha_{mlt}. Initial findings show that mass determination is robust with respect to freedom in the latter quantities, with a 4.4\% maximum deviation for extreme assumptions regarding prior information on \yini-\zini relations and αmlt\alpha_{mlt}. On the other hand, tests carried out so far seem to indicate that global seismology does not have much power to constrain \yini-\zini relations of αmlt\alpha_{mlt} values without resourcing to additional information.Comment: To appear in the Proceedings of the joint TASC2/KASC9 workshop - SPACEINN & HELAS8 conference. 4 page

    A new method to detect solar-like oscillations at very low S/N using statistical significance testing

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    We introduce a new method to detect solar-like oscillations in frequency power spectra of stellar observations, under conditions of very low signal to noise. The Moving-Windowed-Power-Search, or MWPS, searches the power spectrum for signatures of excess power, over and above slowly varying (in frequency) background contributions from stellar granulation and shot or instrumental noise. We adopt a false-alarm approach (Chaplin et al. 2011) to ascertain whether flagged excess power, which is consistent with the excess expected from solar-like oscillations, is hard to explain by chance alone (and hence a candidate detection). We apply the method to solar photometry data, whose quality was systematically degraded to test the performance of the MWPS at low signal-to-noise ratios. We also compare the performance of the MWPS against the frequently applied power-spectrum-of-power-spectrum (PSxPS) detection method. The MWPS is found to outperform the PSxPS method.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS, Added reference

    Thinning of the Sun's magnetic layer: the peculiar solar minimum could have been predicted

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    The solar magnetic activity cycle causes changes in the Sun on timescales that are relevant to human lifetimes. The minimum in solar activity that preceded the current solar cycle (cycle 24) was deeper and quieter than any other recent minimum. Using data from the Birmingham Solar-Oscillations Network (BiSON), we show that the structure of the solar sub-surface layers during the descending phase of the preceding cycle (cycle 23) was very different from that during cycle 22. This leads us to believe that a detailed examination of the data would have led to the prediction that the cycle-24 minimum would be out of the ordinary. The behavior of the oscillation frequencies allows us to infer that changes in the Sun that affected the oscillation frequencies in cycle 23 were localized mainly to layers above about 0.996Rsun, depths shallower than about 3000 km. In cycle 22, on the other hand, the changes must have also occurred in the deeper-lying layers.Comment: To appear in Ap

    Empirical relations for the accurate estimation of stellar masses and radii

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    In this work, we have taken advantage of the most recent accurate stellar characterizations carried out using asteroseismology, eclipsing binaries and interferometry to evaluate a comprehensive set of empirical relations for the estimation of stellar masses and radii. We have gathered a total of 934 stars -- of which around two-thirds are on the Main Sequence -- that are characterized with different levels of precision, most of them having estimates of M, R, Teff, L, g, density, and [Fe/H]. We have deliberately used a heterogeneous sample (in terms of characterizing techniques and spectroscopic types) to reduce the influence of possible biases coming from the observation, reduction, and analysis methods used to obtain the stellar parameters. We have studied a total of 576 linear combinations of Teff, L, g, density, and [Fe/H] (and their logarithms) to be used as independent variables to estimate M or R. We have used an error-in-variables linear regression algorithm to extract the relations and to ensure the fair treatment of the uncertainties. We present a total of 38 new or revised relations that have an adj-R2 regression statistic higher than 0.85, and a relative accuracy and precision better than 10% for almost all the cases. The relations cover almost all the possible combinations of observables, ensuring that, whatever list of observables is available, there is at least one relation for estimating the stellar mass and radius.Comment: 49 Pages, 17 figures, 11 tables, accepted for publication in ApJ

    Changing the νmax\nu_{\max} Scaling Relation: The Need For a Mean Molecular Weight Term

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    The scaling relations that relate the average asteroseismic parameters Δν\Delta \nu and νmax\nu_{\max} to the global properties of stars are used quite extensively to determine stellar properties. While the Δν\Delta \nu scaling relation has been examined carefully and the deviations from the relation have been well documented, the νmax\nu_{\max} scaling relation has not been examined as extensively. In this paper we examine the νmax\nu_{\max} scaling relation using a set of stellar models constructed to have a wide range of mass, metallicity, and age. We find that as with Δν\Delta \nu, νmax\nu_{\max} does not follow the simple scaling relation. The most visible deviation is because of a mean molecular weight term and a Γ1\Gamma_1 term that are commonly ignored. The remaining deviation is more difficult to address. We find that the influence of the scaling relation errors on asteroseismically derived values of logg\log g are well within uncertainties. The influence of the errors on mass and radius estimates is small for main sequence and subgiants, but can be quite large for red giants.Comment: 15 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
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