Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Reza Samadi is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Reza Samadi.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2009

Theoretical amplitudes and lifetimes of non-radial solar-like oscillations in red giants

Marc-Antoine Dupret; K. Belkacem; Reza Samadi; J. Montalbán; O. Moreira; A. Miglio; Mélanie Godart; P. Ventura; H.-G. Ludwig; A. Grigahcène; M. J. Goupil; A. Noels; E. Caffau

Context. Solar-like oscillations have been observed in numerous red giants from ground and from space. An important question arises: could we expect to detect non-radial modes probing the internal structure of these stars? Aims. We investigate under what physical circumstances non-radial modes could be observable in red giants; what would be their amplitudes, lifetimes and heights in the power spectrum (PS)? Methods. Using a non-radial non-adiabatic pulsation code including a non-local time-dependent treatment of convection, we compute the theoretical lifetimes of radial and non-radial modes in several red giant models. Next, using a stochastic excitation model, we compute the amplitudes of these modes and their heights in the PS. Results. Distinct cases appear. Case A corresponds to subgiants and stars at the bottom of the ascending giant branch. Our results show that the lifetimes of the modes are mainly proportional to the inertia I, which is modulated by the mode trapping. The predicted amplitudes are lower for non-radial modes. But the height of the peaks in the PS are of the same order for radial and non-radial modes as long as they can be resolved. The resulting frequency spectrum is complex. Case B corresponds to intermediate models in the red giant branch. In these models, the radiative damping becomes high enough to destroy the non-radial modes trapped in the core. Hence, only modes trapped in the envelope have significant heights in the PS and could be observed. The resulting frequency spectrum of detectable modes is regular for � = 0 and 2, but a little more complex for � = 1 modes because of less efficient trapping. Case C corresponds to models of even higher luminosity. In these models the radiative damping of non-radial modes is even larger than in the previous case and only radial and non-radial modes completely trapped in the envelope could be observed. The frequency pattern is very regular for these stars. The comparison between the predictions for radial and non-radial modes is very different if we consider the heights in the PS instead of the amplitudes. This is important as the heights (not the amplitudes) are used as detection criterion.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2009

HD 50844: a new look at

E. Poretti; Eric Michel; R. Garrido; L. Lefevre; Luciano Mantegazza; Monica Rainer; Eugenio Rodriguez; K. Uytterhoeven; P. J. Amado; S. Martín-Ruiz; A. Moya; E. Niemczura; J. C. Suárez; Wolfgang Zima; A. Baglin; M. Auvergne; F. Baudin; C. Catala; Reza Samadi; M. Alvarez; P. Mathias; M. Paparó; P. I. Pápics; E Plachy

Context. Aims. This work presents the results obtained by CoRoT on HDxa050844, the only δ Sct star observed in the CoRoT initial run (57.6xa0d). The aim of these CoRoT observations was to investigate and characterize for the first time the pulsational behaviour of a δ Sct star, when observed at a level of precision and with a much better duty cycle than from the ground. Methods. The 140u2009016 datapoints were analysed using independent approaches (SigSpec software and different iterative sine-wave fittings) and several checks performed (splitting of the timeseries in different subsets, investigation of the residual light curves and spectra). A level of 10 -5 xa0mag was reached in the amplitude spectra of the CoRoT timeseries. The space monitoring was complemented by ground-based high-resolution spectroscopy, which allowed the mode identification of 30xa0terms. Results. The frequency analysis of the CoRoT timeseries revealed hundreds of terms in the frequency range 0–30xa0d -1 . All the cross-checks confirmed this new result. The initial guess that δ Sct stars have a very rich frequency content is confirmed. The spectroscopic mode identification gives theoretical support since very high-degree modes (up to


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2009

\delta

A.-L. Huat; A.-M. Hubert; Frederic Baudin; M. Floquet; Coralie Neiner; Y. Frémat; J. Gutierrez-Soto; L. Andrade; B. de Batz; P. D. Diago; M. Emilio; F. Espinosa Lara; J. Fabregat; E. Janot-Pacheco; B. Leroy; C. Martayan; T. Semaan; J. Suso; M. Auvergne; Claude Catala; Eric Michel; Reza Samadi

ell=14


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2009

Scuti stars from CoRoT space photometry

J. Gutierrez-Soto; M. Floquet; Reza Samadi; R. Garrido; M. Emilio; L. Andrade; E. Janot-Pacheco; F. Espinosa Lara; T. Semaan; M. Auvergne; S. Chaintreuil; Claude Catala

) are identified. We also prove that cancellation effects are not sufficient in removing the flux variations associated to these modes at the noise level of the CoRoT measurements. The ground-based observations indicate that HDxa050844 is an evolved star that is slightly underabundant in heavy elements, located on the Terminal Age Main Sequence. Probably due to this unfavourable evolutionary status, no clear regular distribution is observed in the frequency set. The predominant term (


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2013

The B0.5IVe CoRoT target HD 49330★ I. Photometric analysis from CoRoT data

B. Mosser; W. A. Dziembowski; K. Belkacem; M. J. Goupil; Eric Michel; Reza Samadi; I. Soszyński; M. Vrard; Y. Elsworth; S. Hekker; S. Mathur

f_1=6.92


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2009

Low-amplitude variations detected by CoRoT in the B8IIIe star HD 175869

Coralie Neiner; J. Gutierrez-Soto; Frederic Baudin; B. de Batz; Y. Frémat; A.-L. Huat; M. Floquet; A.-M. Hubert; B. Leroy; P. D. Diago; E. Poretti; Fabien Carrier; Monica Rainer; Claude Catala; O. Thizy; C. Buil; J. Ribeiro; L. Andrade; M. Emilio; F. Espinosa Lara; J. Fabregat; E. Janot-Pacheco; C. Martayan; T. Semaan; J. Suso; A. Baglin; Eric Michel; Reza Samadi

xa0d -1 ) has been identified as the fundamental radial mode combining ground-based photometric and spectroscopic data.u2029 Conclusions.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2009

Period-luminosity relations in evolved red giants explained by solar-like oscillations

P. D. Diago; J. Gutierrez-Soto; M. Auvergne; J. Fabregat; A.-M. Hubert; M. Floquet; Y. Frémat; R. Garrido; L. Andrade; B. de Batz; M. Emilio; F. Espinosa Lara; A.-L. Huat; E. Janot-Pacheco; B. Leroy; C. Martayan; Coralie Neiner; T. Semaan; J. Suso; Claude Catala; E. Poretti; Monica Rainer; Katrien Uytterhoeven; Eric Michel; Reza Samadi

Context. Be stars undergo outbursts producing a circumstellar disk from the ejected material. The beating of non-radial pulsations has been put forward as a possible mechanism of ejection. Aims. We analyze the pulsational behavior of the early B0.5IVe star HD 49330 observed during the first CoRoT long run towards the Galactical anticenter (LRA 1). This Be star is located close to the lower edge of the β Cephei instability strip in the HR diagram and showed a 0.03 mag outburst during the CoRoT observations. It is thus an ideal case for testing the aforementioned hypothesis. Methods. We analyze the CoRoT light curve of HD 49330 using Fourier methods and non-linear least square fitting. Results. In this star, we find pulsation modes typical of β Cep stars (p modes) and SPB stars (g modes) with amplitude variations along the run directly correlated with the outburst. These results provide new clues about the origin of the Be phenomenon as well as strong constraints on the seismic modelling of Be stars.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

The pulsations of the B5IVe star HD 181231 observed with CoRoT and ground-based spectroscopy

S. Charpinet; Elizabeth M. Green; Annie Baglin; Valérie Van Grootel; G. Fontaine; G. Vauclair; S. Chaintreuil; W. W. Weiss; Eric Michel; Michel Auvergne; Claude Catala; Reza Samadi; F. Baudin

Context. The origin of the short-term variability in Be stars remains a matter of controversy. Pulsations and rotational modulation are the components of the favored hypothesis. Aims. We present our analysis of CoRoT data of the B8IIIe star HD 175869 observed during the first short run in the center direction (SRC1). Methods. We review both the instrumental effects visible in the CoRoT light curve and the analysis methods used by the CoRoT Be team. We applied these methods to the CoRoT light curve of the star HD 175869. A search for line-profile variations in the spectroscopic data was also performed. We also searched for a magnetic field, by applying the LSD technique to spectropolarimetric data. Results. The light curve exhibits low-amplitude variations of the order of 300 μmag with a double wave shape. A frequency within the range determined for the rotational frequency and 6 of its harmonics are detected. The main frequency and its first harmonic exhibit amplitude variations of a few days. Other significant frequencies of low-amplitude from 25 to a few μmag are also found. The analysis of line profiles from ground-based spectroscopic data does not detect any variation. In addition, no Zeeman signature was found. Conclusions. Inhomogeneities caused by stellar activity in or just above the photosphere are proposed to produce the photometric variability detected by CoRoT in the Be star HD 175869. The hypothesis that non-radial pulsations are the origin of these variations cannot be excluded.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2011

Pulsations in the late-type Be star HD 50 209 detected by CoRoT

E. Chapellier; E. Rodríguez; M. Auvergne; K. Uytterhoeven; P. Mathias; M.-P. Bouabid; E. Poretti; D. Le Contel; S. Martin-Ruiz; P. J. Amado; R. Garrido; M. Hareter; M. Rainer; Laurent Eyer; M. Paparó; D. Díaz-Fraile; A. Baglin; F. Baudin; Claude Catala; Eric Michel; Reza Samadi

Context. Solar-like oscillations in red giants have been investigated with the space-borne missions CoRoT and Kepler, while pulsations in more evolved M giants have been studied with ground-based microlensing surveys. After 3.1 years of observation with Kepler, it is now possible to link these different observations of semi-regular variables. Aims. We aim to identify period-luminosity sequences in evolved red giants identified as semi-regular variables and to interpret them in terms of solar-like oscillations. Then, we investigate the consequences of the comparison of ground-based and space-borne observations. Methods. We first measured global oscillation parameters of evolved red giants observed with Kepler with the envelope autocorrelation function method. We then used an extended form of the universal red giant oscillation pattern, extrapolated to very low frequency, to fully identify their oscillations. The comparison with ground-based results was then used to express the period-luminosity relation as a relation between the large frequency separation and the stellar luminosity. Results. From the link between red giant oscillations observed by Kepler and period-luminosity sequences, we have identified these relations in evolved red giants as radial and non-radial solar-like oscillations. We were able to expand scaling relations at very low frequency (periods as long as 100 days and large frequency separation less than 0.05 μHz). This helped us identify the different sequences of period-luminosity relations, and allowed us to propose a calibration of the K magnitude with the observed large frequency separation. Conclusions. Interpreting period-luminosity relations in red giants in terms of solar-like oscillations allows us to investigate the time series obtained from ground-based microlensing surveys with a firm physical basis. This can be done with an analytical expression that describes the low-frequency oscillation spectra. The different behavior of oscillations at low frequency, with frequency separations scaling only approximately with the square root of the mean stellar density, can be used to precisely address the physics of the semi-regular variables. This will allow improved distance measurements and opens the way to extragalactic asteroseismology with the observations of M giants in the Magellanic Clouds.


Astronomische Nachrichten | 2010

CoRoT opens a new era in hot B subdwarf asteroseismology !,!! Detection of multiple g-mode oscillations in KPD 0629! 0016

E. Poretti; Luciano Mantegazza; E. Niemczura; M. Rainer; T. Semaan; T. Lüftinger; A. Baglin; M. Auvergne; Eric Michel; Reza Samadi

Context. HD 181231 is a B5IVe star, which has been observed with the CoRoT satellite during ∼5 consecutive months and simultaneously from the ground in spectroscopy and spectropolarimetry. Aims. By analysing these data, we aim to detect and characterize as many pulsation frequencies as possible, to search for the presence of beating effects possibly at the origin of the Be phenomenon. Our results will also provide a basis for seismic modelling. Methods. The fundamental parameters of the star are determined from spectral fitting and from the study of the circumstellar emission. The CoRoT photometric data and ground-based spectroscopy are analysed using several Fourier techniques: Clean-ng ,P asper ,a nd Tisaft, as well as a time-frequency technique. A search for a magnetic field is performed by applying the LSD technique to the spectropolarimetric data. Results. We find that HD 181231 is a B5IVe star seen with an inclination of ∼45 degrees. No magnetic field is detected in its photosphere. We detect at least 10 independent significant frequencies of variations among the 54 detected frequencies, interpreted in terms of non-radial pulsation modes and rotation. Two longer-term variations are also detected: one at ∼14 days resulting from a beating effect between the two main frequencies of short-term variations, the other at ∼116 days due either to a beating of frequencies or to a zonal pulsation mode. Conclusions. Our analysis of the CoRoT light curve and ground-based spectroscopic data of HD 181231 has led to the determination of the fundamental and pulsational parameters of the star, including beating effects. This will allow a precise seismic modelling of this star.

Collaboration


Dive into the Reza Samadi's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Frederic Baudin

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. Baglin

University of Coimbra

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. Fabregat

University of Valencia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. Suso

University of Valencia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

P. D. Diago

University of Valencia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eugenio Rodriguez

Spanish National Research Council

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

P. J. Amado

Spanish National Research Council

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge