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Featured researches published by A. Derekas.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2014

PROPERTIES OF 42 SOLAR-TYPE KEPLER TARGETS FROM THE ASTEROSEISMIC MODELING PORTAL

T. S. Metcalfe; O. L. Creevey; G. Doğan; S. Mathur; H. Xu; Timothy R. Bedding; W. J. Chaplin; J. Christensen-Dalsgaard; C. Karoff; Regner Trampedach; O. Benomar; Benjamin P. Brown; Derek L. Buzasi; T. L. Campante; Z. Çelik; M. S. Cunha; G. R. Davies; S. Deheuvels; A. Derekas; M. Di Mauro; R. A. García; Joyce Ann Guzik; R. Howe; Keith B. MacGregor; A. Mazumdar; J. Montalbán; M. J. P. F. G. Monteiro; D. Salabert; Aldo M. Serenelli; D. Stello

Recently the number of main-sequence and subgiant stars exhibiting solar-like oscillations that are resolved into individual mode frequencies has increased dramatically. While only a few such data sets were available for detailed modeling just a decade ago, the Kepler mission has produced suitable observations for hundreds of new targets. This rapid expansion in observational capacity has been accompanied by a shift in analysis and modeling strategies to yield uniform sets of derived stellar properties more quickly and easily. We use previously published asteroseismic and spectroscopic data sets to provide a uniform analysis of 42 solar-type Kepler targets from the Asteroseismic Modeling Portal. We find that fitting the individual frequencies typically doubles the precision of the asteroseismic radius, mass, and age compared to grid-based modeling of the global oscillation properties, and improves the precision of the radius and mass by about a factor of three over empirical scaling relations. We demonstrate the utility of the derived properties with several applications.


Science | 2011

HD 181068: A Red Giant in a Triply Eclipsing Compact Hierarchical Triple System

A. Derekas; L. L. Kiss; T. Borkovits; D. Huber; H. Lehmann; J. Southworth; Timothy R. Bedding; D. Balam; M. Hartmann; M. Hrudkova; Michael J. Ireland; J. Kovács; Gy. Mező; A. Moór; E. Niemczura; Gordon E. Sarty; Gy. Szabó; R. Szabó; J. H. Telting; A. Tkachenko; K. Uytterhoeven; J. M. Benkő; Steve Bryson; V. Maestro; A. E. Simon; D. Stello; Gail H. Schaefer; Conny Aerts; Theo A. ten Brummelaar; P. De Cat

The Kepler satellite reveals details of the oscillations patterns of an evolved star in an exotic triple-star system. Hierarchical triple systems comprise a close binary and a more distant component. They are important for testing theories of star formation and of stellar evolution in the presence of nearby companions. We obtained 218 days of Kepler photometry of HD 181068 (magnitude of 7.1), supplemented by ground-based spectroscopy and interferometry, which show it to be a hierarchical triple with two types of mutual eclipses. The primary is a red giant that is in a 45-day orbit with a pair of red dwarfs in a close 0.9-day orbit. The red giant shows evidence for tidally induced oscillations that are driven by the orbital motion of the close pair. HD 181068 is an ideal target for studies of dynamical evolution and testing tidal friction theories in hierarchical triple systems.


The Astronomical Journal | 2016

Kepler Eclipsing Binary Stars. VII. The Catalog of Eclipsing Binaries Found in the Entire Kepler Data Set

Brian Kirk; Kyle E. Conroy; Andrej Prsa; Michael Abdul-Masih; Angela Kochoska; G. Matijevic; Kelly Hambleton; S. Bloemen; Tabetha S. Boyajian; Laurance R. Doyle; Benjamin J. Fulton; Abe J. Hoekstra; Kian J. Jek; Stephen R. Kane; Veselin Kostov; David W. Latham; Tsevi Mazeh; Jerome A. Orosz; Joshua Pepper; Billy Quarles; Darin Ragozzine; Avi Shporer; J. Southworth; Keivan G. Stassun; Susan E. Thompson; William F. Welsh; Eric Agol; A. Derekas; Jonathan Devor; Debra A. Fischer

The primary Kepler Mission provided nearly continuous monitoring of ~200,000 objects with unprecedented photometric precision. We present the final catalog of eclipsing binary systems within the 105 deg^2 Kepler field of view. This release incorporates the full extent of the data from the primary mission (Q0-Q17 Data Release). As a result, new systems have been added, additional false positives have been removed, ephemerides and principal parameters have been recomputed, classifications have been revised to rely on analytical models, and eclipse timing variations have been computed for each system. We identify several classes of systems including those that exhibit tertiary eclipse events, systems that show clear evidence of additional bodies, heartbeat systems, systems with changing eclipse depths, and systems exhibiting only one eclipse event over the duration of the mission. We have updated the period and galactic latitude distribution diagrams and included a catalog completeness evaluation. The total number of identified eclipsing and ellipsoidal binary systems in the Kepler field of view has increased to 2878, 1.3% of all observed Kepler targets. An online version of this catalog with downloadable content and visualization tools is maintained athttp://keplerEBs.villanova.edu.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015

Observations of Cepheids with the MOST satellite: contrast between pulsation modes

Nancy Remage Evans; R. Szabó; A. Derekas; László Szabados; Chris Cameron; Jaymie M. Matthews; D. Sasselov; Rainer Kuschnig; Jason F. Rowe; David B. Guenther; A. F. J. Moffat; Slavek M. Rucinski; W. W. Weiss

The quantity and quality of satellite photometric data strings is revealing details in Cepheid nvariation at very low levels. Specifically, we observed a Cepheid pulsating in the fundamental nmode and one pulsating in the first overtone with the Canadian MOST satellite. The 3.7-d nperiod fundamental mode pulsator (RT Aur) has a light curve that repeats precisely, and can nbe modeled by a Fourier series very accurately. The overtone pulsator (SZ Tau, 3.1 d period) non the other hand shows light curve variation from cycle to cycle which we characterize by nthe variations in the Fourier parameters. We present arguments that we are seeing instability nin the pulsation cycle of the overtone pulsator, and that this is also a characteristic of the O −C ncurves of overtone pulsators. On the other hand, deviations from cycle to cycle as a function nof pulsation phase follow a similar pattern in both stars, increasing after minimum radius. In nsummary, pulsation in the overtone pulsator is less stable than that of the fundamental mode npulsator at both long and short timescales.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017

The Kepler Cepheid V1154 Cyg revisited: light curve modulation and detection of granulation

A. Derekas; E. Plachy; László Molnár; Á. Sódor; J. M. Benkő; László Szabados; Zs. Bognár; B. Csak; Gy. M. Szabó; R. Szabó; A. Pál

We present a detailed analysis of the bright Cepheid-type variable star V1154 Cygni using 4 years of continuous observations by the Kepler space telescope. We detected 28 frequencies using standard Fourier transform method.We identified modulation of the main pulsation frequency and its harmonics with a period of ~159 d. This modulation is also present in the Fourier parameters of the light curve and the O-C diagram. We detected another modulation with a period of about 1160 d. The star also shows significant power in the low-frequency region that we identified as granulation noise. The effective timescale of the granulation agrees with the extrapolated scalings of red giant stars. Non-detection of solar-like oscillations indicates that the pulsation inhibits other oscillations. We obtained new radial velocity observations which are in a perfect agreement with previous years data, suggesting that there is no high mass star companion of V1154 Cygni. Finally, we discuss the possible origin of the detected frequency modulations.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2011

Cepheid investigations using the Kepler space telescope

R. Szabó; László Szabados; Chow-Choong Ngeow; R. Smolec; A. Derekas; P. Moskalik; J. Nuspl; H. Lehmann; Gábor Fűrész; J. Molenda-Żakowicz; Steve Bryson; Arne A. Henden; D. W. Kurtz; D. Stello; James M. Nemec; J. M. Benkő; L. Berdnikov; H. Bruntt; Nancy Remage Evans; N. A. Gorynya; E. N. Pastukhova; R. J. Simcoe; Jonathan E. Grindlay; E. J. Los; A. Doane; S. Laycock; Douglas J. Mink; G. Champine; A. Sliski; G. Handler

We report results of initial work done on selected candidate Cepheids to be observed with the Kepler space telescope. Prior to the launch, 40 candidates were selected from previous surveys and data bases. The analysis of the first 322 d of Kepler photometry, and recent ground-based follow-up multicolour photometry and spectroscopy allowed us to confirm that one of these stars, V 1154 Cyg (KIC 7548061), is indeed a 4.9-d Cepheid. Using the phase lag method, we show that this star pulsates in the fundamental mode. New radial velocity data are consistent with previous measurements, suggesting that a long-period binary component is unlikely. No evidence is seen in the ultraprecise, nearly uninterrupted Kepler photometry for non-radial or stochastically excited modes at the micromagnitude level. The other candidates are not Cepheids, but an interesting mix of possible spotted stars, eclipsing systems and flare stars.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

A NEW sdO+dM BINARY with EXTREME ECLIPSES and REFLECTION EFFECT

A. Derekas; Peter Nemeth; J. Southworth; T. Borkovits; K. Sarneczky; A. Pál; B. Csak; David Garcia-Alvarez; P. F. L. Maxted; L. L. Kiss; K. Vida; M. Gy. Szabó; Levente Kriskovics

We report the discovery of a new totally-eclipsing binary (RA=06:40:29.11; Dec=+38:56:52.2; J=2000.0; Rmax=17.2 mag) with an sdO primary and a strongly irradiated red dwarf companion. It has an orbital period of Porb=0.187284394(11) d and an optical eclipse depth in excess of 5 magnitudes. We obtained two low-resolution classification spectra with GTC/OSIRIS and ten medium-resolution spectra with WHT/ISIS to constrain the properties of the binary members. The spectra are dominated by H Balmer and He II absorption lines from the sdO star, and phase-dependent emission lines from the irradiated companion. A combined spectroscopic and light curve analysis implies a hot subdwarf temperature of Teff(spec) = 55 000 +/- 3000K, surface gravity of log g(phot) = 6.2 +/- 0.04 (cgs) and a He abundance of log(nHe/nH) = -2.24 +/- 0.40. The hot sdO star irradiates the red-dwarf companion, heating its substellar point to about 22 500K. Surface parameters for the companion are difficult to constrain from the currently available data: the most remarkable features are the strong H Balmer and C II-III lines in emission. Radial velocity estimates are consistent with the sdO+dM classification. The photometric data do not show any indication of sdO pulsations with amplitudes greater than 7mmag, and Halpha-filter images do not provide evidence of the presence of a planetary nebula associated with the sdO star.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016

Finest light-curve details, physical parameters and period fluctuations of CoRoT RR Lyrae stars

J. M. Benkő; R. Szabó; A. Derekas; Ádám Sódor

The CoRoT satellite supplied the scientific community with a huge data base of variable stars. Among them the RR Lyrae stars have intensively been discussed in numerous papers in the last few years, but the latest runs have not been checked to find RR Lyrae stars up to now. Our main goal was to fill this gap and complete the CoRoT RR Lyrae sample. We found nine unstudied RR Lyrae stars. Seven of them are new discoveries. We identified three new Blazhko stars. The Blazhko effect shows non-strictly repetitive nature for all stars. The frequency spectrum of the Blazhko star CoRoT 104948132 contains second overtone frequency with the highest known period ratio. The harmonic amplitude and phase declines with the harmonic order were studied for non-Blazhko stars. We found a period dependent but similar shape amplitude decline for all stars. We discovered significant random period fluctuation for one of the two oversampled target, CM Ori. After a successful transformation of the CoRoT band parameters to the Johnson V values we estimated the basic physical properties such as mass, luminosity, metallicity. The sample can be divided into two subgroups with respect to the metallicity but otherwise the physical parameters are in the canonical range of RR Lyrae stars.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2018

A photometric study of globular clusters observed by the APOGEE survey

Szabolcs Mészáros; D. A. García-Hernández; Santi Cassisi; M. Monelli; László Szigeti; F. Dell'Agli; A. Derekas; Thomas Masseron; Matthew Shetrone; Peter B. Stetson; Olga Zamora

In this paper we describe the photometric and spectroscopic properties of multiple populations in seven northern globular clusters. In this study we employ precise ground based photometry from the private collection of Stetson, space photometry from the Hubble Space Telescope, literature abundances of Na and O, and APOGEE survey abundances for Mg, Al, C, and N. Multiple populations are identified by their position in the CU,B,I -V pseudo-CMD and confirmed with their chemical composition determined using abundances. We confirm the expectation from previous studies that the RGB in all seven clusters are split and the different branches have different chemical compositions. The Mg-Al anti-correlations were well explored by the APOGEE and Gaia-ESO surveys for most globular clusters, some clusters showing bimodal distributions, while others continuous distributions. Even though the structure (i.e., bimodal vs. continuous) of Mg-Al can greatly vary, the Al-rich and Al-poor populations do not seem to have very different photometric properties, agreeing with theoretical calculations. There is no one-to-one correspondence between the Mg-Al anticorrelation shape (bimodal vs. continuous) and the structure of the RGB seen in the HST pseudo-CMDs, with the HST photometric information usually implying more complex formation/evolution histories than the spectroscopic ones. We report on finding two second generation HB stars in M5, and five second generation AGB stars in M92, which is the most metal-poor cluster to date in which second generation AGB stars have been observed.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2018

A new compact young moving group around V1062 Scorpii

S. Roser; Elena Schilbach; Bertrand Goldman; Thomas Henning; Attila Moor; A. Derekas

Aims. We are searching for new open clusters or moving groups in the solar neighbourhood. Methods. We used the Gaia -TGAS catalogue, cut it into narrow proper motion and parallax slices and searched for significant spatial over-densities of stars in each slice. We then examined stars forming over-densities in optical and near-infrared colour-magnitude diagrams to determine if they are compatible with isochrones of a cluster. Results. We detected a hitherto unknown moving group or cluster in the Upper Centaurus Lupus (UCL) section of the Scorpius-Centaurus OB association (Sco-Cen) at a distance of 175 pc from the Sun. It is a group of 63 comoving stars of less than 10 to about 25 Myr in age. For the brightest stars that are present in the Gaia -TGAS catalogue, the mean difference between kinematic and trigonometric distance moduli is − 0.01 mag with a standard deviation of 0.11 mag. Fainter cluster candidates are found in the HSOY catalogue, where no trigonometric parallaxes are available. For a subset of our candidate stars, we obtained radial velocity measurements at the MPG/ESO 2.2 m telescope in La Silla. Altogether we found 12 members with confirmed radial velocities and parallaxes, 31 with parallaxes or radial velocities, and 20 candidates from the convergent point method. The isochrone masses of our 63 members range from 2.6 to 0.7 M ⊙ .

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R. Szabó

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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J. M. Benkő

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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B. Csak

Eötvös Loránd University

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László Szabados

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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T. Borkovits

Eötvös Loránd University

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A. Pál

Eötvös Loránd University

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Gy. M. Szabó

Eötvös Loránd University

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L. L. Kiss

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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