Bibcode
Corsaro, E.; Mathur, S.; García, R. A.; Gaulme, P.; Pinsonneault, M.; Stassun, K.; Stello, D.; Tayar, J.; Trampedach, R.; Jiang, C.; Nitschelm, C.; Salabert, D.
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 605, id.A3, 18 pp.
Advertised on:
8
2017
Journal
Citations
50
Refereed citations
48
Description
Context. The effect of metallicity on the granulation activity in stars,
and hence on the convective motions in general, is still poorly
understood. Available spectroscopic parameters from the updated
APOGEE-Kepler catalog, coupled with high-precision photometric
observations from NASA's Kepler mission spanning more than four years of
observation, make oscillating red giant stars in open clusters crucial
testbeds. Aims: We aim to determine the role of metallicity on
the stellar granulation activity by discriminating its effect from that
of different stellar properties such as surface gravity, mass, and
temperature. We analyze 60 known red giant stars belonging to the open
clusters NGC 6791, NGC 6819, and NGC 6811, spanning a metallicity range
from [Fe/H] ≃ - 0.09 to 0.32. The parameters describing the
granulation activity of these stars and their frequency of maximum
oscillation power, νmax, are studied while taking into
account different masses, metallicities, and stellar evolutionary
stages. We derive new scaling relations for the granulation activity,
re-calibrate existing ones, and identify the best scaling relations from
the available set of observations. Methods: We adopted the
Bayesian code Diamonds for the analysis of the background signal in the
Fourier spectra of the stars. We performed a Bayesian parameter
estimation and model comparison to test the different model hypotheses
proposed in this work and in the literature. Results: Metallicity
causes a statistically significant change in the amplitude of the
granulation activity, with a dependency stronger than that induced by
both stellar mass and surface gravity. We also find that the metallicity
has a significant impact on the corresponding time scales of the
phenomenon. The effect of metallicity on the time scale is stronger than
that of mass. Conclusions: A higher metallicity increases the
amplitude of granulation and meso-granulation signals and slows down
their characteristic time scales toward longer periods. The trend in
amplitude is in qualitative agreement with predictions from existing 3D
hydrodynamical simulations of stellar atmospheres from main sequence to
red giant stars. We confirm that the granulation activity is not
sensitive to changes in the stellar core and that it only depends on the
atmospheric parameters of stars.