Derek L. Buzasi
Florida Gulf Coast University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Derek L. Buzasi.
Science | 2010
William J. Borucki; David G. Koch; Gibor Basri; Natalie M. Batalha; Timothy M. Brown; Douglas A. Caldwell; John C. Caldwell; Jørgen Christensen-Dalsgaard; William D. Cochran; Edna DeVore; Edward W. Dunham; Andrea K. Dupree; Thomas Gautier; John C. Geary; Ronald L. Gilliland; Alan Gould; Steve B. Howell; Jon M. Jenkins; Y. Kondo; David W. Latham; Geoffrey W. Marcy; Soren Meibom; Hans Kjeldsen; Jack J. Lissauer; David G. Monet; David R. Morrison; Dimitar D. Sasselov; Jill Tarter; Alan P. Boss; D. E. Brownlee
Detecting Distant Planets More than 400 planets have been detected outside the solar system, most of which have masses similar to that of the gas giant planet, Jupiter. Borucki et al. (p. 977, published online 7 January) summarize the planetary findings derived from the first six weeks of observations with the Kepler mission whose objective is to search for and determine the frequency of Earth-like planets in the habitable zones of other stars. The results include the detection of five new exoplanets, which confirm the existence of planets with densities substantially lower than those predicted for gas giant planets. Initial observations confirm the existence of planets with densities lower than those predicted for gas giant planets. The Kepler mission was designed to determine the frequency of Earth-sized planets in and near the habitable zone of Sun-like stars. The habitable zone is the region where planetary temperatures are suitable for water to exist on a planet’s surface. During the first 6 weeks of observations, Kepler monitored 156,000 stars, and five new exoplanets with sizes between 0.37 and 1.6 Jupiter radii and orbital periods from 3.2 to 4.9 days were discovered. The density of the Neptune-sized Kepler-4b is similar to that of Neptune and GJ 436b, even though the irradiation level is 800,000 times higher. Kepler-7b is one of the lowest-density planets (~0.17 gram per cubic centimeter) yet detected. Kepler-5b, -6b, and -8b confirm the existence of planets with densities lower than those predicted for gas giant planets.
Science | 2011
Laurance R. Doyle; Joshua A. Carter; Daniel C. Fabrycky; Robert W. Slawson; Steve B. Howell; Joshua N. Winn; Jerome A. Orosz; Andrej Prˇsa; William F. Welsh; Samuel N. Quinn; David W. Latham; Guillermo Torres; Lars A. Buchhave; Geoffrey W. Marcy; Jonathan J. Fortney; Avi Shporer; Eric B. Ford; Jack J. Lissauer; Darin Ragozzine; Michael Rucker; Natalie M. Batalha; Jon M. Jenkins; William J. Borucki; David G. Koch; Christopher K. Middour; Jennifer R. Hall; Sean McCauliff; Michael N. Fanelli; Elisa V. Quintana; Matthew J. Holman
An exoplanet has been observed, comparable in size and mass to Saturn, that orbits a pair of stars. We report the detection of a planet whose orbit surrounds a pair of low-mass stars. Data from the Kepler spacecraft reveal transits of the planet across both stars, in addition to the mutual eclipses of the stars, giving precise constraints on the absolute dimensions of all three bodies. The planet is comparable to Saturn in mass and size and is on a nearly circular 229-day orbit around its two parent stars. The eclipsing stars are 20 and 69% as massive as the Sun and have an eccentric 41-day orbit. The motions of all three bodies are confined to within 0.5° of a single plane, suggesting that the planet formed within a circumbinary disk.
Nature | 2011
Timothy R. Bedding; Benoit Mosser; Daniel Huber; Josefina Montalban; P. G. Beck; Joergen Christensen-Dalsgaard; Yvonne P. Elsworth; Rafael Arenas Garcia; Andrea Miglio; D. Stello; T. R. White; Joris De Ridder; S. Hekker; Conny Aerts; C. Barban; K. Belkacem; Anne-Marie Broomhall; Timothy M. Brown; Derek L. Buzasi; Fabien Carrier; William J. Chaplin; Maria Pia di Mauro; Marc-Antoine Dupret; S. Frandsen; Ronald L. Gilliland; M. J. Goupil; Jon M. Jenkins; T. Kallinger; Steven D. Kawaler; Hans Kjeldsen
Red giants are evolved stars that have exhausted the supply of hydrogen in their cores and instead burn hydrogen in a surrounding shell. Once a red giant is sufficiently evolved, the helium in the core also undergoes fusion. Outstanding issues in our understanding of red giants include uncertainties in the amount of mass lost at the surface before helium ignition and the amount of internal mixing from rotation and other processes. Progress is hampered by our inability to distinguish between red giants burning helium in the core and those still only burning hydrogen in a shell. Asteroseismology offers a way forward, being a powerful tool for probing the internal structures of stars using their natural oscillation frequencies. Here we report observations of gravity-mode period spacings in red giants that permit a distinction between evolutionary stages to be made. We use high-precision photometry obtained by the Kepler spacecraft over more than a year to measure oscillations in several hundred red giants. We find many stars whose dipole modes show sequences with approximately regular period spacings. These stars fall into two clear groups, allowing us to distinguish unambiguously between hydrogen-shell-burning stars (period spacing mostly ∼50 seconds) and those that are also burning helium (period spacing ∼100 to 300 seconds).
The Astrophysical Journal | 2010
Timothy R. Bedding; Daniel Huber; D. Stello; Y. Elsworth; S. Hekker; T. Kallinger; S. Mathur; Benoit Mosser; H. L. Preston; J. Ballot; C. Barban; Anne-Marie Broomhall; Derek L. Buzasi; W. J. Chaplin; R. A. García; M. Gruberbauer; S. J. Hale; J. De Ridder; Soren Frandsen; William J. Borucki; Timothy M. Brown; Jørgen Christensen-Dalsgaard; Ronald L. Gilliland; Jon M. Jenkins; Hans Kjeldsen; David G. Koch; K. Belkacem; Lars Bildsten; H. Bruntt; T. L. Campante
We have measured solar-like oscillations in red giants using time-series photometry from the first 34 days of science operations of the Kepler Mission. The light curves, obtained with 30 minute sampling, reveal clear oscillations in a large sample of G and K giants, extending in luminosity from the red clump down to the bottom of the giant branch. We confirm a strong correlation between the large separation of the oscillations (Δν) and the frequency of maximum power (νmax). We focus on a sample of 50 low-luminosity stars (νmax > 100 μHz, L <~ 30 L sun) having high signal-to-noise ratios and showing the unambiguous signature of solar-like oscillations. These are H-shell-burning stars, whose oscillations should be valuable for testing models of stellar evolution and for constraining the star formation rate in the local disk. We use a new technique to compare stars on a single echelle diagram by scaling their frequencies and find well-defined ridges corresponding to radial and non-radial oscillations, including clear evidence for modes with angular degree l = 3. Measuring the small separation between l = 0 and l = 2 allows us to plot the so-called C-D diagram of δν02 versus Δν. The small separation δν01 of l = 1 from the midpoint of adjacent l = 0 modes is negative, contrary to the Sun and solar-type stars. The ridge for l = 1 is notably broadened, which we attribute to mixed modes, confirming theoretical predictions for low-luminosity giants. Overall, the results demonstrate the tremendous potential of Kepler data for asteroseismology of red giants.
Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2011
Ronald L. Gilliland; W. J. Chaplin; Edward W. Dunham; Vic S. Argabright; William J. Borucki; Gibor Basri; Stephen T. Bryson; Derek L. Buzasi; Douglas A. Caldwell; Y. Elsworth; Jon M. Jenkins; David G. Koch; Jeffrey Kolodziejczak; A. Miglio; Jeffrey Edward van Cleve; Lucianne M. Walkowicz; William F. Welsh
Kepler mission results are rapidly contributing to fundamentally new discoveries in both the exoplanet and asteroseismology fields. The data returned from Kepler are unique in terms of the number of stars observed, precision of photometry for time series observations, and the temporal extent of high duty cycle observations. As the first mission to provide extensive time series measurements on thousands of stars over months to years at a level hitherto possible only for the Sun, the results from Kepler will vastly increase our knowledge of stellar variability for quiet solar-type stars. Here, we report on the stellar noise inferred on the timescale of a few hours of most interest for detection of exoplanets via transits. By design the data from moderately bright Kepler stars are expected to have roughly comparable levels of noise intrinsic to the stars and arising from a combination of fundamental limitations such as Poisson statistics and any instrument noise. The noise levels attained by Kepler on-orbit exceed by some 50% the target levels for solar-type, quiet stars. We provide a decomposition of observed noise for an ensemble of 12th magnitude stars arising from fundamental terms (Poisson and readout noise), added noise due to the instrument and that intrinsic to the stars. The largest factor in the modestly higher than anticipated noise follows from intrinsic stellar noise. We show that using stellar parameters from galactic stellar synthesis models, and projections to stellar rotation, activity, and hence noise levels reproduce the primary intrinsic stellar noise features.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2011
S. Mathur; S. Hekker; Regner Trampedach; J. Ballot; T. Kallinger; Derek L. Buzasi; R. A. García; D. Huber; A. Jiménez; B. Mosser; Timothy R. Bedding; Y. Elsworth; C. Regulo; D. Stello; W. J. Chaplin; J. De Ridder; S. J. Hale; Karen Kinemuchi; Hans Kjeldsen; Fergal Mullally; Susan E. Thompson
The granulation pattern that we observe on the surface of the Sun is due to hot plasma rising to the photosphere where it cools down and descends back into the interior at the edges of granules. This is the visible manifestation of convection taking place in the outer part of the solar convection zone. Because red giants have deeper convection zones than the Sun, we cannot a priori assume that their granulation is a scaled version of solar granulation. Until now, neither observations nor one-dimensional analytical convection models could put constraints on granulation in red giants. With asteroseismology, this study can now be performed. We analyze ~1000 red giants that have been observed by Kepler during 13 months. We fit the power spectra with Harvey-like profiles to retrieve the characteristics of the granulation (timescale τgran and power P gran). We search for a correlation between these parameters and the global acoustic-mode parameter (the position of maximum power, νmax) as well as with stellar parameters (mass, radius, surface gravity (log g), and effective temperature (T eff)). We show that τeffν–0.89 max and P granν–1.90 max, which is consistent with the theoretical predictions. We find that the granulation timescales of stars that belong to the red clump have similar values while the timescales of stars in the red giant branch are spread in a wider range. Finally, we show that realistic three-dimensional simulations of the surface convection in stars, spanning the (T eff, log g) range of our sample of red giants, match the Kepler observations well in terms of trends.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2011
S. Hekker; Y. Elsworth; J. De Ridder; B. Mosser; R. A. García; T. Kallinger; S. Mathur; D. Huber; Derek L. Buzasi; H. L. Preston; S. J. Hale; J. Ballot; W. J. Chaplin; C. Regulo; Timothy R. Bedding; D. Stello; William J. Borucki; David G. Koch; J. M. Jenkins; Cheryl L. Allen; R. L. Gilliland; Hans Kjeldsen; J. Christensen-Dalsgaard
Context. The large number of stars for which uninterrupted high-precision photometric timeseries data are being collected with Kepler and CoRoT initiated the development of automated methods to analyse the stochastically excited oscillations in main-sequence, subgiant and red-giant stars. Aims. We investigate the differences in results for global oscillation parameters of G and K red-giant stars due to different methods and definitions. We also investigate uncertainties originating from the stochastic nature of the oscillations. Methods. For this investigation we use Kepler data obtained during the first four months of operation. These data have been analysed by different groups using already published methods and the results are compared. We also performed simulations to investigate the uncertainty on the resulting parameters due to different realizations of the stochastic signal. Results. We obtain results for the frequency of maximum oscillation power (νmax) and the mean large separation (� Δν� ) from different methods for over one thousand red-giant stars. The results for these parameters agree within a few percent and seem therefore robust to the different analysis methods and definitions used here. The uncertainties for νmax and � Δν� due to differences in realization noise are not negligible and should be taken into account when using these results for stellar modelling.
Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2014
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.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2015
D. Stello; Daniel Huber; Sanjib Sharma; Jennifer A. Johnson; Mikkel N. Lund; R. Handberg; Derek L. Buzasi; Victor Silva Aguirre; W. J. Chaplin; A. Miglio; Marc H. Pinsonneault; Sarbani Basu; Timothy R. Bedding; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; Luca Casagrande; G. R. Davies; Y. Elsworth; R. A. García; S. Mathur; Maria Pia di Mauro; Benoit Mosser; Donald P. Schneider; Aldo M. Serenelli; M. Valentini
NASA’s re-purposed Kepler mission ‐ dubbed K2 ‐ has brought new scientific opportunitie s that were not anticipated for the original Kepler mission. One science goal that makes optimal use of K2’s capa bilities, in particular its 360-degree ecliptic field of view, is galacti c archaeology ‐ the study of the evolution of the Galaxy from the fossil stellar record. The thrust of this research i s to exploit high-precision, time-resolved photometry from K2 in order to detect oscillations in red giant stars. Th is asteroseismic information can provide estimates of stellar radius (hence distance), mass and age of vast numbers of stars across the Galaxy. Here we present the initial analysis of a subset of red giants, observed towards the North Galactic Gap, during the mission’s first full science campaign. We investigate the feasibility of us ing K2 data for detecting oscillations in red giants that span a range in apparent magnitude and evolutionary state (hence intrinsic luminosity). We demonstrate that oscillations are detectable for essentially all cool g iants within the logg range � 1.9‐3.2. Our detection is complete down to Kp � 14.5, which results in a seismic sample with little or no detectio n bias. This sample is ideally suited to stellar population studies that seek to investigate potential shortcomings of contemporary Galaxy models. Subject headings:stars: fundamental parameters — stars: oscillations — stars: interiors
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2013
C. Karoff; T. S. Metcalfe; W. J. Chaplin; S. Frandsen; F. Grundahl; Hans Kjeldsen; J. Christensen-Dalsgaard; M. B. Nielsen; S. Frimann; A. O. Thygesen; T. Arentoft; T. M. Amby; S. G. Sousa; Derek L. Buzasi
We have monitored 20 Sun-like stars in the Kepler field-of-view for excess flux with the FIES spectrograph on the Nordic Optical Telescope since the launch of Kepler spacecraft in 2009. These 20 stars were selected based on their asteroseismic properties to sample the parameter space (effective temperature, surface gravity, activity level etc.) around the Sun. Though the ultimate goal is to improve stellar dynamo models, we focus the present paper on the combination of space-based and ground-based observations can be used to test the age-rotation-activity relations. In this paper we describe the considerations behind the selection of these 20 Sun-like stars and present an initial asteroseismic analysis, which includes stellar age estimates. We also describe the observations from the Nordic Optical Telescope and present mean values of measured excess fluxes. These measurements are combined with estimates of the rotation periods obtained from a simple analysis of the modulation in photometric observations from Kepler caused by starspots, and asteroseismic determinations of stellar ages, to test relations between between age, rotation and activity.