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Featured researches published by T. L. Campante.


Science | 2011

Ensemble asteroseismology of solar-type stars with the NASA Kepler mission.

W. J. Chaplin; Hans Kjeldsen; Jørgen Christensen-Dalsgaard; Sarbani Basu; A. Miglio; T. Appourchaux; Timothy R. Bedding; Y. Elsworth; R. A. García; R. L. Gilliland; Léo Girardi; G. Houdek; C. Karoff; S. D. Kawaler; T. S. Metcalfe; J. Molenda-Żakowicz; M. J. P. F. G. Monteiro; M. J. Thompson; G. A. Verner; J. Ballot; Alfio Bonanno; I. M. Brandão; Anne-Marie Broomhall; H. Bruntt; T. L. Campante; E. Corsaro; O. L. Creevey; G. Doğan; Lisa Esch; Ning Gai

Measurements of 500 Sun-like stars show that their properties differ from those predicted by stellar population models. In addition to its search for extrasolar planets, the NASA Kepler mission provides exquisite data on stellar oscillations. We report the detections of oscillations in 500 solar-type stars in the Kepler field of view, an ensemble that is large enough to allow statistical studies of intrinsic stellar properties (such as mass, radius, and age) and to test theories of stellar evolution. We find that the distribution of observed masses of these stars shows intriguing differences to predictions from models of synthetic stellar populations in the Galaxy.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2013

Asteroseismic Fundamental Properties of Solar-type Stars Observed by the NASA Kepler Mission

W. J. Chaplin; Sarbani Basu; Daniel Huber; Aldo M. Serenelli; Luca Casagrande; V. Silva Aguirre; Warrick H. Ball; O. L. Creevey; Laurent Gizon; R. Handberg; C. Karoff; R. Lutz; J. P. Marques; A. Miglio; D. Stello; Marian Doru Suran; D. Pricopi; T. S. Metcalfe; M. J. P. F. G. Monteiro; J. Molenda-Żakowicz; T. Appourchaux; J. Christensen-Dalsgaard; Y. Elsworth; R. A. García; G. Houdek; Hans Kjeldsen; Alfio Bonanno; T. L. Campante; E. Corsaro; P. Gaulme

We use asteroseismic data obtained by the NASA Kepler mission to estimate the fundamental properties of more than 500 main-sequence and sub-giant stars. Data obtained during the first 10 months of Kepler science operations were used for this work, when these solar-type targets were observed for one month each in survey mode. Stellar properties have been estimated using two global asteroseismic parameters and complementary photometric and spectroscopic data. Homogeneous sets of effective temperatures, T eff, were available for the entire ensemble from complementary photometry; spectroscopic estimates of T eff and [Fe/H] were available from a homogeneous analysis of ground-based data on a subset of 87 stars. We adopt a grid-based analysis, coupling six pipeline codes to 11 stellar evolutionary grids. Through use of these different grid-pipeline combinations we allow implicitly for the impact on the results of stellar model dependencies from commonly used grids, and differences in adopted pipeline methodologies. By using just two global parameters as the seismic inputs we are able to perform a homogenous analysis of all solar-type stars in the asteroseismic cohort, including many targets for which it would not be possible to provide robust estimates of individual oscillation frequencies (due to a combination of low signal-to-noise ratio and short dataset lengths). The median final quoted uncertainties from consolidation of the grid-based analyses are for the full ensemble (spectroscopic subset) approximately 10.8% (5.4%) in mass, 4.4% (2.2%) in radius, 0.017 dex (0.010 dex) in log g, and 4.3% (2.8%) in mean density. Around 36% (57%) of the stars have final age uncertainties smaller than 1 Gyr. These ages will be useful for ensemble studies, but should be treated carefully on a star-by-star basis. Future analyses using individual oscillation frequencies will offer significant improvements on up to 150 stars, in particular for estimates of the ages, where having the individual frequency data is most important.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2010

Solar-like Oscillations in Low-luminosity Red Giants: First Results from Kepler

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.


Science | 2013

Stellar Spin-Orbit Misalignment in a Multiplanet System

Daniel Huber; Joshua A. Carter; Mauro Barbieri; A. Miglio; Katherine M. Deck; Daniel C. Fabrycky; Benjamin T. Montet; Lars A. Buchhave; W. J. Chaplin; S. Hekker; Josefina Montalban; Roberto Sanchis-Ojeda; Sarbani Basu; Timothy R. Bedding; T. L. Campante; Joergen Christensen-Dalsgaard; Y. Elsworth; D. Stello; T. Arentoft; Eric B. Ford; Ronald L. Gilliland; R. Handberg; Andrew W. Howard; Howard Isaacson; John Asher Johnson; C. Karoff; Steven D. Kawaler; Hans Kjeldsen; David W. Latham; Mikkel N. Lund

Misaligned Planets Stars with multiple coplanar planets have not been seen to show misalignments between the equatorial plane of the star and the orbital plane of the planets—a diagnostic of the dynamical history of planetary systems. Huber et al. (p. 331) analyzed the Kepler 56 planetary system, which contains a giant-sized and an intermediate-sized planet. The planets have orbits that are close to coplanar, but the planetary orbits are misaligned with the stellar equator. A third companion in a wide orbit, which could be another star or a planet, could explain the misaligned configuration. Kepler observations show that stellar spin-orbit misalignments are not confined to planetary systems with hot Jupiters. Stars hosting hot Jupiters are often observed to have high obliquities, whereas stars with multiple coplanar planets have been seen to have low obliquities. This has been interpreted as evidence that hot-Jupiter formation is linked to dynamical disruption, as opposed to planet migration through a protoplanetary disk. We used asteroseismology to measure a large obliquity for Kepler-56, a red giant star hosting two transiting coplanar planets. These observations show that spin-orbit misalignments are not confined to hot-Jupiter systems. Misalignments in a broader class of systems had been predicted as a consequence of torques from wide-orbiting companions, and indeed radial velocity measurements revealed a third companion in a wide orbit in the Kepler-56 system.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2014

Seismic constraints on the radial dependence of the internal rotation profiles of six Kepler subgiants and young red giants

S. Deheuvels; G. Doğan; M. J. Goupil; T. Appourchaux; O. Benomar; H. Bruntt; T. L. Campante; Luca Casagrande; T. Ceillier; G. R. Davies; P. De Cat; J. N. Fu; R. A. García; A. Lobel; B. Mosser; Daniel Reese; C. Regulo; Jesper Schou; T. Stahn; A. O. Thygesen; X. H. Yang; W. J. Chaplin; J. Christensen-Dalsgaard; P. Eggenberger; Laurent Gizon; S. Mathis; J. Molenda-Żakowicz; Marc H. Pinsonneault

Context. We still do not understand which physical mechanisms are responsible for the transport of angular momentum inside stars. The recent detection of mixed modes that contain the clear signature of rotation in the spectra of Kepler subgiants and red giants gives us the opportunity to make progress on this question.Aims. Our aim is to probe the radial dependence of the rotation profiles for a sample of Kepler targets. For this purpose, subgiants and early red giants are particularly interesting targets because their rotational splittings are more sensitive to the rotation outside the deeper core than is the case for their more evolved counterparts.Methods. We first extracted the rotational splittings and frequencies of the modes for six young Kepler red giants. We then performed a seismic modeling of these stars using the evolutionary codes Cesam2k and astec. By using the observed splittings and the rotational kernels of the optimal models, we inverted the internal rotation profiles of the six stars.Results. We obtain estimates of the core rotation rates for these stars, and upper limits to the rotation in their convective envelope. We show that the rotation contrast between the core and the envelope increases during the subgiant branch. Our results also suggest that the core of subgiants spins up with time, while their envelope spins down. For two of the stars, we show that a discontinuous rotation profile with a deep discontinuity reproduces the observed splittings significantly better than a smooth rotation profile. Interestingly, the depths that are found to be most probable for the discontinuities roughly coincide with the location of the H-burning shell, which separates the layers that contract from those that expand.Conclusions. We characterized the differential rotation pattern of six young giants with a range of metallicities, and with both radiative and convective cores on the main sequence. This will bring observational constraints to the scenarios of angular momentum transport in stars. Moreover, if the existence of sharp gradients in the rotation profiles of young red giants is confirmed, it is expected to help in distinguishing between the physical processes that could transport angular momentum in the subgiant and red giant branches.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2012

A Uniform Asteroseismic Analysis of 22 Solar-type Stars Observed by Kepler

S. Mathur; T. S. Metcalfe; M. Woitaszek; H. Bruntt; G. A. Verner; Jørgen Christensen-Dalsgaard; O. L. Creevey; G. Doğan; Sarbani Basu; C. Karoff; D. Stello; T. Appourchaux; T. L. Campante; W. J. Chaplin; R. A. García; Timothy R. Bedding; O. Benomar; Alfio Bonanno; S. Deheuvels; Y. Elsworth; P. Gaulme; Joyce Ann Guzik; R. Handberg; S. Hekker; W. Herzberg; M. J. P. F. G. Monteiro; L. Piau; P.-O. Quirion; C. Regulo; Mary Tork Roth

Asteroseismology with the Kepler space telescope is providing not only an improved characterization of exoplanets and their host stars, but also a new window on stellar structure and evolution for the large sample of solar-type stars in the field. We perform a uniform analysis of 22 of the brightest asteroseismic targets with the highest signal-to-noise ratio observed for 1 month each during the first year of the mission, and we quantify the precision and relative accuracy of asteroseismic determinations of the stellar radius, mass, and age that are possible using various methods. We present the properties of each star in the sample derived from an automated analysis of the individual oscillation frequencies and other observational constraints using the Asteroseismic Modeling Portal (AMP), and we compare them to the results of model-grid-based methods that fit the global oscillation properties. We find that fitting the individual frequencies typically yields asteroseismic radii and masses to ~1% precision, and ages to ~2.5% precision (respectively, 2, 5, and 8 times better than fitting the global oscillation properties). The absolute level of agreement between the results from different approaches is also encouraging, with model-grid-based methods yielding slightly smaller estimates of the radius and mass and slightly older values for the stellar age relative to AMP, which computes a large number of dedicated models for each star. The sample of targets for which this type of analysis is possible will grow as longer data sets are obtained during the remainder of the mission.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015

Ages and fundamental properties of Kepler exoplanet host stars from asteroseismology

Silva Aguirre; G. R. Davies; Sarbani Basu; J. Christensen-Dalsgaard; O. L. Creevey; T. S. Metcalfe; Timothy R. Bedding; Luca Casagrande; R. Handberg; Mikkel N. Lund; Poul Nissen; W. J. Chaplin; D. Huber; Aldo M. Serenelli; D. Stello; V. Van Eylen; T. L. Campante; Y. Elsworth; R. L. Gilliland; S. Hekker; C. Karoff; Steven D. Kawaler; Hans Kjeldsen; M. Lundkvist

We present a study of 33 {\it Kepler} planet-candidate host stars for which asteroseismic observations have sufficiently high signal-to-noise ratio to allow extraction of individual pulsation frequencies. We implement a new Bayesian scheme that is flexible in its input to process individual oscillation frequencies, combinations of them, and average asteroseismic parameters, and derive robust fundamental properties for these targets. Applying this scheme to grids of evolutionary models yields stellar properties with median statistical uncertainties of 1.2\% (radius), 1.7\% (density), 3.3\% (mass), 4.4\% (distance), and 14\% (age), making this the exoplanet host-star sample with the most precise and uniformly determined fundamental parameters to date. We assess the systematics from changes in the solar abundances and mixing-length parameter, showing that they are smaller than the statistical errors. We also determine the stellar properties with three other fitting algorithms and explore the systematics arising from using different evolution and pulsation codes, resulting in 1\% in density and radius, and 2\% and 7\% in mass and age, respectively. We confirm previous findings of the initial helium abundance being a source of systematics comparable to our statistical uncertainties, and discuss future prospects for constraining this parameter by combining asteroseismology and data from space missions. Finally we compare our derived properties with those obtained using the global average asteroseismic observables along with effective temperature and metallicity, finding an excellent level of agreement. Owing to selection effects, our results show that the majority of the high signal-to-noise ratio asteroseismic {\it Kepler} host stars are older than the Sun.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2010

A PRECISE ASTEROSEISMIC AGE AND RADIUS FOR THE EVOLVED SUN-LIKE STAR KIC 11026764

T. S. Metcalfe; M. J. P. F. G. Monteiro; M. J. Thompson; J. Molenda-Żakowicz; T. Appourchaux; W. J. Chaplin; G. Doğan; P. Eggenberger; Timothy R. Bedding; H. Bruntt; O. L. Creevey; P.-O. Quirion; D. Stello; Alfio Bonanno; V. Silva Aguirre; Sarbani Basu; Lisa Esch; Ning Gai; M. Di Mauro; Alexander G. Kosovichev; Irina N. Kitiashvili; J. C. Suárez; Andrés Moya; L. Piau; R. A. García; J. P. Marques; Antonio Frasca; K. Biazzo; S. G. Sousa; S. Dreizler

The primary science goal of the Kepler Mission is to provide a census of exoplanets in the solar neighborhood, including the identification and characterization of habitable Earth-like planets. The asteroseismic capabilities of the mission are being used to determine precise radii and ages for the target stars from their solar-like oscillations. Chaplin et al. published observations of three bright G-type stars, which were monitored during the first 33.5 days of science operations. One of these stars, the subgiant KIC 11026764, exhibits a characteristic pattern of oscillation frequencies suggesting that it has evolved significantly. We have derived asteroseismic estimates of the properties of KIC 11026764 from Kepler photometry combined with ground-based spectroscopic data. We present the results of detailed modeling for this star, employing a variety of independent codes and analyses that attempt to match the asteroseismic and spectroscopic constraints simultaneously. We determine both the radius and the age of KIC 11026764 with a precision near 1%, and an accuracy near 2% for the radius and 15% for the age. Continued observations of this star promise to reveal additional oscillation frequencies that will further improve the determination of its fundamental properties.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

Asteroseismic Determination of Obliquities of the Exoplanet Systems Kepler-50 and Kepler-65

W. J. Chaplin; Roberto Sanchis-Ojeda; T. L. Campante; R. Handberg; D. Stello; Joshua N. Winn; Sarbani Basu; J. Christensen-Dalsgaard; G. R. Davies; T. S. Metcalfe; Lars A. Buchhave; Debra A. Fischer; Timothy R. Bedding; William D. Cochran; Y. Elsworth; R. L. Gilliland; S. Hekker; Daniel Huber; Howard Isaacson; C. Karoff; Steven D. Kawaler; Hans Kjeldsen; D. W. Latham; Mikkel N. Lund; M. Lundkvist; Geoffrey W. Marcy; A. Miglio; Jack J. Lissauer

Results on the obliquity of exoplanet host stars?the angle between the stellar spin axis and the planetary orbital axis?provide important diagnostic information for theories describing planetary formation. Here we present the first application of asteroseismology to the problem of stellar obliquity determination in systems with transiting planets and Sun-like host stars. We consider two systems observed by the NASA Kepler mission which have multiple transiting small (super-Earth sized) planets: the previously reported Kepler-50 and a new system, Kepler-65, whose planets we validate in this paper. Both stars show rich spectra of solar-like oscillations. From the asteroseismic analysis we find that each host has its rotation axis nearly perpendicular to the line of sight with the sines of the angles constrained at the 1? level to lie above 0.97 and 0.91, respectively. We use statistical arguments to show that coplanar orbits are favored in both systems, and that the orientations of the planetary orbits and the stellar rotation axis are correlated.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2012

VERIFYING ASTEROSEISMICALLY DETERMINED PARAMETERS OF KEPLER STARS USING HIPPARCOS PARALLAXES: SELF-CONSISTENT STELLAR PROPERTIES AND DISTANCES

V. Silva Aguirre; Luca Casagrande; Sarbani Basu; T. L. Campante; W. J. Chaplin; Daniel Huber; A. Miglio; Aldo M. Serenelli; J. Ballot; Timothy R. Bedding; Jørgen Christensen-Dalsgaard; O. L. Creevey; Y. Elsworth; R. A. García; R. L. Gilliland; S. Hekker; Hans Kjeldsen; S. Mathur; T. S. Metcalfe; M. J. P. F. G. Monteiro; B. Mosser; Marc H. Pinsonneault; D. Stello; A. Weiss; Peter Tenenbaum; Joseph D. Twicken; Kamal Uddin

Accurately determining the properties of stars is of prime importance for characterizing stellar populations in our Galaxy. The field of asteroseismology has been thought to be particularly successful in such an endeavor for stars in different evolutionary stages. However, to fully exploit its potential, robust methods for estimating stellar parameters are required and independent verification of the results is mandatory. With this purpose, we present a new technique to obtain stellar properties by coupling asteroseismic analysis with the InfraRed Flux Method. By using two global seismic observables and multi-band photometry, the technique allows us to obtain masses, radii, effective temperatures, bolometric fluxes, and hence distances for field stars in a self-consistent manner. We apply our method to 22 solar-like oscillators in the Kepler short-cadence sample, that have accurate Hipparcos parallaxes. Our distance determinations agree to better than 5%, while measurements of spectroscopic effective temperatures and interferometric radii also validate our results. We briefly discuss the potential of our technique for stellar population analysis and models of Galactic Chemical Evolution.

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W. J. Chaplin

University of Birmingham

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Y. Elsworth

University of Birmingham

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R. A. García

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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