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Paper: Asteroseismology of Cool Dwarfs and Giants with Kepler
Volume: 448, 16th Cambridge Workshop on Cool Stars, Stellar Systems, and the Sun
Page: 167
Authors: Gilliland, R. L.
Abstract: The primary science goal of the Kepler Mission is to detect planets in the habitable zones of their host stars where liquid water could exist on the planet surface, and to determine the intrinsic frequency of these and other exoplanets. The technique employed by Kepler is to search for shallow transits, that in the case of a true Earth analog would be 85 parts per million deep, lasting an average of 10 hours, and happening once per year. This combination of small, short, and rare events drives mission development and operations to support ultra-high precision photometry on one field of 150,000 largely solar-like stars with nearly continuous exposures covering at least 3.5 years. Since the transit depth returns only the size of a candidate planet relative to the size of its host star, fulfillment of an additional Kepler science goal of determining physical properties of the discovered planets requires us to also determine stellar properties, with stellar radius being the most important. For the latter asteroseismology is a particularly important tool that allows stellar radii to be determined to ∼1% in favorable cases. The Kepler asteroseismology program is organized into a large international collaboration – the Kepler Asteroseismic Science Consortium consisting of a dozen working groups and some 300 members. The observations to date in the area of cool giant stars consist of 30 minute integrations for some 1,200 stars spanning a full year. For cool dwarfs the observations to date using 1 minute integrations aimed at asteroseismology consist of three types: (1) A few thousand stars observed for one month each in a “survey” mode to identify the best prospects for lengthier observations. (2) About 200 stars hosting planet candidates observed for periods now reaching up to a year for which asteroseismology is desired whenever possible. (3) A set of about 100 stars for which much more extended observations are possible that have been selected purely on the basis of asteroseismic interest. The red giants have typical magnitudes of about 12th, with a couple of hundred selected at brighter magnitudes. In nearly all cases the astrophysical signatures of oscillations and granulation dominate noise sources. Cool dwarfs studied for asteroseismology range from 16 Cyg A and B near 6th magnitude, to planet host stars of 13th magnitude for which extensive observations may allow detection of at least the asteroseismic large separation to constrain the stellar mean density and hence radius. I review the target selections, the instrumental capabilities relevant for cool-star asteroseismology, and the basic approaches and promises of asteroseismology. Emphasis is given to reviewing the extensive new returns from the Kepler Mission that are providing new insights into cool dwarfs and giants from asteroseismic analyses.
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