Bibcode
Stello, Dennis; Basu, Sarbani; Bruntt, Hans; Mosser, Benoît; Stevens, Ian R.; Brown, Timothy M.; Christensen-Dalsgaard, Jørgen; Gilliland, Ronald L.; Kjeldsen, Hans; Arentoft, Torben; Ballot, Jérôme; Barban, Caroline; Bedding, Timothy R.; Chaplin, William J.; Elsworth, Yvonne P.; García, Rafael A.; Goupil, Marie-Jo; Hekker, Saskia; Huber, Daniel; Mathur, Savita; Meibom, Søren; Sangaralingam, Vinothini; Baldner, Charles S.; Belkacem, Kevin; Biazzo, Katia; Brogaard, Karsten; Suárez, Juan Carlos; D'Antona, Francesca; Demarque, Pierre; Esch, Lisa; Gai, Ning; Grundahl, Frank; Lebreton, Yveline; Jiang, Biwei; Jevtic, Nada; Karoff, Christoffer; Miglio, Andrea; Molenda-Żakowicz, Joanna; Montalbán, Josefina; Noels, Arlette; Roca Cortés, T.; Roxburgh, Ian W.; Serenelli, Aldo M.; Silva Aguirre, Victor; Sterken, Christiaan; Stine, Peter; Szabó, Robert; Weiss, Achim; Borucki, William J.; Koch, David; Jenkins, Jon M.
Referencia bibliográfica
The Astrophysical Journal Letters, Volume 713, Issue 2, pp. L182-L186 (2010).
Fecha de publicación:
4
2010
Número de citas
83
Número de citas referidas
68
Descripción
Asteroseismology of stars in clusters has been a long-sought goal
because the assumption of a common age, distance, and initial chemical
composition allows strong tests of the theory of stellar evolution. We
report results from the first 34 days of science data from the Kepler
Mission for the open cluster NGC 6819—one of the four clusters in
the field of view. We obtain the first clear detections of solar-like
oscillations in the cluster red giants and are able to measure the large
frequency separation, Δν, and the frequency of maximum
oscillation power, νmax. We find that the asteroseismic
parameters allow us to test cluster membership of the stars, and even
with the limited seismic data in hand, we can already identify four
possible non-members despite their having a better than 80% membership
probability from radial velocity measurements. We are also able to
determine the oscillation amplitudes for stars that span about 2 orders
of magnitude in luminosity and find good agreement with the prediction
that oscillation amplitudes scale as the luminosity to the power of 0.7.
These early results demonstrate the unique potential of asteroseismology
of the stellar clusters observed by Kepler.
Proyectos relacionados
Sismología Solar y Estelar y Búsqueda de Exoplanetas
Los objetivos principales de este proyecto son: 1) estudiar la estructura y la dinámica del interior solar, 2) ampliar este estudio a otros tipos de estrellas y 3) buqueda de planetas extrasolares utilizando métodos fotométricos y su caracterización con información complementaria (espectrometría). Para alcanzar el primer objetivo, utilizamos la
Savita
Mathur