Bibcode
Suran, M. D.; Stello, D.; Karoff, C.; Lutz, R.; Hekker, S.; Marques, J. P.; Bonanno, A.; Corsaro, E.; Handberg, R.; Gizon, L.; Creevey, O. L.; Ball, W. H.; Huber, D.; Miglio, A.; Appourchaux, T.; Casagrande, L.; Serenelli, A.; Pricopi, D.; Kjeldsen, H.; Gaulme, P.; Silva Aguirre, V.; Basu, S.; Chaplin, W. J.; Monteiro, M. J. P. F. G.; Metcalfe, T. S.; Régulo, C.; Campante, T. L.; Mathur, S.; Houdek, G.; García, R. A.; Elsworth, Y.; Christensen-Dalsgaard, J.; Molenda-Żakowicz, J.; Mosser, B.; Salabert, D.
Bibliographical reference
The Astrophysical Journal Supplement, Volume 210, Issue 1, article id. 1, 22 pp. (2014).
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1
2014
Citations
314
Refereed citations
260
Description
We use asteroseismic data obtained by the NASA Kepler mission to
estimate the fundamental properties of more than 500 main-sequence and
sub-giant stars. Data obtained during the first 10 months of Kepler
science operations were used for this work, when these solar-type
targets were observed for one month each in survey mode. Stellar
properties have been estimated using two global asteroseismic parameters
and complementary photometric and spectroscopic data. Homogeneous sets
of effective temperatures, T eff, were available for the
entire ensemble from complementary photometry; spectroscopic estimates
of T eff and [Fe/H] were available from a homogeneous
analysis of ground-based data on a subset of 87 stars. We adopt a
grid-based analysis, coupling six pipeline codes to 11 stellar
evolutionary grids. Through use of these different grid-pipeline
combinations we allow implicitly for the impact on the results of
stellar model dependencies from commonly used grids, and differences in
adopted pipeline methodologies. By using just two global parameters as
the seismic inputs we are able to perform a homogenous analysis of all
solar-type stars in the asteroseismic cohort, including many targets for
which it would not be possible to provide robust estimates of individual
oscillation frequencies (due to a combination of low signal-to-noise
ratio and short dataset lengths). The median final quoted uncertainties
from consolidation of the grid-based analyses are for the full ensemble
(spectroscopic subset) approximately 10.8% (5.4%) in mass, 4.4% (2.2%)
in radius, 0.017 dex (0.010 dex) in log g, and 4.3% (2.8%) in mean
density. Around 36% (57%) of the stars have final age uncertainties
smaller than 1 Gyr. These ages will be useful for ensemble studies, but
should be treated carefully on a star-by-star basis. Future analyses
using individual oscillation frequencies will offer significant
improvements on up to 150 stars, in particular for estimates of the
ages, where having the individual frequency data is most important.
Related projects
Helio and Astero-Seismology and Exoplanets Search
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
Savita
Mathur