Helio and Astero-Seismology and Exoplanets Search

    General
    Description

    The principal objectives of this project are: 1) to study the structure and dynamics of the solar interior, 2) to extend this study to other stars, 3) to search for extrasolar planets using photometric methods (primarily by transits of their host stars) and their characterization (using radial velocity information) and 4) the study of the planetary atmospheres.

    To reach our first objective, we use Global Helioseismology (analysis of the solar oscillation eigenmodes) and Local Helioseismology (that uses travel waves). Solar seismology allows to accurately infer information about the internal structure and dynamics of the Sun,. This project covers the various necessary aspects to attain the aforementioned objectives: instrumental, observational, reduction, analysis and interpretation of data and, finally, theoretical developments of inversion techniques and development of structure and evolution models.

    On the other hand, the Astroseismology aims to obtain a similar knowledge of other stars. Thanks to the huge number of stars observed by CoRoT, Kepler and TESS space missions it is possible to extract seismic global parameters of hundreds of stars; both solar type and red giants. Furthermore, the recent deployment and beginning of observations with the high precision spectrographs of the SONG (Stellar Observations Network Group) ground-based telescopes will substantially improve the characterization of the eigenmodes spectrum in bright stars.

    The strategy of using planetary transits to discover new planets around other stars consists of the photometric detection of the dimming of the light of the star when one of its planets passes, or ‘transits’ in front of it. Currently this method is the preferred one for the study of small planets, not only due to its sensitivity, but also because this method allows a more detailed investigation of the planets found (e.g. Planetary atmospheres). This technique is similar to the one that is used for helio- and asteroseismology and so some of its methods are a logical extension from that. However, it is also important to develop new algorithms and observing methods for the unequivocal detection and analysis of planets and to be able to distinguish them from false alarms.

    The current horizon for studies of exoplanets with space missions involves new missions, beginning with the launch of CHEOPS, followed by TESS, JWST and in 2026, PLATO. Thus, there is presently a window of opportunity for ground-based facilities, and we are pursuing observations using mainly TNG, NOT y GTC.

    Principal investigator

    Milestones

    1. Members of the team (P. G. Beck, H. Deeg, S. Mathur, F. H. Perez, C. Regulo) were involved in the discovery and characterization of a warm Saturn transiting a slightly evolved solar-like star (HD 89345) observed with the NASA K2 mission and confirmed with RV measurements. The seismic analysis of the star led to precise estimates of the stellar parameters.
    2. P.G.Beck lead two papers on binary systems hosting red-giant binaries, using asteroseismic techniques and data from the Kepler space telescope. Beck et al (2018a,b) allow a better understanding of the stellar structure of the stellar components, and the tidal interaction in binary systems. The internal mixing was investigated through measurements lithium.
    3. S. Mathur participated in the analysis of the first planet discovered with the NASA TESS mission, orbiting the star Pi Men. The seismic analysis led to a very marginal detection but gave a hint of the asteroseismic potential with the TESS data (Gandolfi et al. 2018).
    4. Project "Solar-SONG". For the first time, stellar instrumentation (SONG spectrograph) has been used to obtain precise measurements of the radial velocity of the Sun with high temporal cadence (4 sec.) and long duration (57 consecutive days) to allow the detailed study of the spectrum of oscillations ( p-modes) and obtain their global parameters
    5. The researchers Hans J. Deeg and Juan Antonio Belmonte coordinated the edition of the "Handbook of Exoplanets", four volumes with 160 articles by more than 300 specialists in exoplanetology. Three years of intensive work have resulted in a complete documentation on the state of the art of the studies of the planets beyond the Solar System.

    Related publications

    The quest for the solar g modes 2010A&ARv..18..197A
    The quasi-biennial periodicity (QBP) in velocity and intensity helioseismic observations. The seismic QBP over solar cycle 23 2012A&A...539A.135S
    On the Solar Origin of the Signal at 220.7 μHz: A Possible Component of a g-Mode? 2009ApJS..184..288J
    Acoustic power absorption and enhancement generated by slow and fast MHD waves. Evidence of solar cycle velocity/intensity amplitude changes consistent with the mode conversion theory 2010A&A...516A..30S
    Doppler tomography of transiting exoplanets: a prograde, low-inclined orbit for the hot Jupiter CoRoT-11b 2012A&A...543L...5G
    Characterization of the HD 17156 planetary system 2009A&A...503..601B
    Absolute parameters of the Algol binary Z Vul 2009NewA...14..528L
    The impact of seismicity on high angular resolution astronomy: the case of El Teide Observatory, Canary Islands 2008SPIE.7012E.102E
    Unusual high-frequency oscillations in the Kepler δ Scuti star KIC 4840675 2012MNRAS.424.1187B
    The γ Doradus CoRoT target HD 49434. I. Results from the ground-based campaign 2008A&A...489.1213U
    The Kepler characterization of the variability among A- and F-type stars. I. General overview 2011A&A...534A.125U
    The excitation of solar-like oscillations in a δSct star by efficient envelope convection 2011Natur.477..570A
    Photometric multi-site campaign on massive B stars in the open cluster χ Persei (NGC 884) 2008JPhCS.118a2071S
    Looking for a Connection between the Am Phenomenon and Hybrid δ Sct -γ Dor Pulsation: Determination of the Fundamental Parameters and Abundances of HD 114839 and BD +18 4914 2011ApJ...743..153H
    Ground-based observations of the β Cephei CoRoT main target HD 180 642: abundance analysis and mode identification 2009A&A...506..269B
    Ground-based observations of the beta Cephei CoRoT main target HD 180642 2009CoAst.158..292B
    Ground-based observations of O and B stars 2009CoAst.158..156U
    Close-up of primary and secondary asteroseismic CoRoT targets and the ground-based follow-up observations 2008JPhCS.118a2077U
    An asteroseismic study of the β Cephei star 12 Lacertae: multisite spectroscopic observations, mode identification and seismic modelling 2009MNRAS.396.1460D
    A multisite photometric study of two unusual β Cep stars: the magnetic V2052 Oph and the massive rapid rotator V986 Oph 2012MNRAS.424.2380H
    The Lupus Transit Survey for Hot Jupiters: Results and Lessons 2009AJ....137.4368B
    Searching for transits in data with long time baselines and poor sampling 2011A&A...529A...6T
    Verification of the Kepler Input Catalog from Asteroseismology of Solar-type Stars 2011ApJ...738L..28V
    Unveiling stellar magnetic activity using CoRoT seismic observations 2011JPhCS.271a2045M
    The solar-like CoRoT target HD 170987: spectroscopic and seismic observations 2010A&A...518A..53M
    The CoRoT target HD 175726: an active star with weak solar-like oscillations 2009A&A...506...33M
    solarFLAG hare and hounds: estimation of p-mode frequencies from Sun-as-star helioseismology data 2008MNRAS.389.1780J
    Solar-like oscillations in red giants observed with Kepler: comparison of global oscillation parameters from different methods 2011A&A...525A.131H
    Solar-like Oscillations in KIC 11395018 and KIC 11234888 from 8 Months of Kepler Data 2011ApJ...733...95M
    Solar-like oscillations in HD 181420: data analysis of 156 days of CoRoT data 2009A&A...506...51B
    Seismic Evidence for a Rapidly Rotating Core in a Lower-giant-branch Star Observed with Kepler 2012ApJ...756...19D
    Radius Determination of Solar-type Stars Using Asteroseismology: What to Expect from the Kepler Mission 2009ApJ...700.1589S
    Predicting the Detectability of Oscillations in Solar-type Stars Observed by Kepler 2011ApJ...732...54C
    Oscillation mode frequencies of 61 main-sequence and subgiant stars observed by Kepler 2012A&A...543A..54A
    Kepler-21b: A 1.6 R Earth Planet Transiting the Bright Oscillating F Subgiant Star HD 179070 2012ApJ...746..123H
    Granulation in Red Giants: Observations by the Kepler Mission and Three-dimensional Convection Simulations 2011ApJ...741..119M
    Global asteroseismic properties of solar-like oscillations observed by Kepler: a comparison of complementary analysis methods 2011MNRAS.415.3539V
    Fundamental properties of five Kepler stars using global asteroseismic quantities and ground-based observations 2012A&A...537A.111C
    First asteroseismic results from CoRoT 2008CoAst.156...73M
    Evidence for the Impact of Stellar Activity on the Detectability of Solar-like Oscillations Observed by Kepler 2011ApJ...732L...5C

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