2,513 results on '"Koch D"'
Search Results
2. In-vitro model to mimic T cell subset change in human PDAC organoid co-culture
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Knoblauch, M., Ma, T., Beirith, I., Koch, D., Hofmann, F., Heinrich, K., Aghamaliev, U., Sirtl, S., Westphalen, C. B., Nieß, H., Reichert, M., Angele, M. K., Regel, I., Bazhin, A. V., Werner, J., Ilmer, M., and Renz, Bernhard W.
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- 2023
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3. On the Suitability of NOx-Storage-Catalysts for Hydrogen Internal Combustion Engines and a Radio Frequency-Based NOx Loading Monitoring
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Walter, S., Hagen, G., Koch, D., Geißelmann, A., and Moos, R.
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- 2023
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4. The Cultural Adaptation of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for Spanish-Speaking Latino Caregivers of Children with Autism During COVID-19
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Baires, Natalia A., García-Zambrano, Sebastián, Koch, D. Shane, Portillo, Nelson, editor, Morgan, Melissa L., editor, and Gallegos, Miguel, editor
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- 2023
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5. A Service-Oriented Sustainability Platform—Basic Considerations to Facilitate a Data-Based Sustainability Management System in Manufacturing Companies
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Koch, D., Waltersmann, L., Sauer, A., Behrens, Bernd-Arno, Series Editor, Grzesik, Wit, Series Editor, Ihlenfeldt, Steffen, Series Editor, Kara, Sami, Series Editor, Ong, Soh-Khim, Series Editor, Tomiyama, Tetsuo, Series Editor, Williams, David, Series Editor, Liewald, Mathias, editor, Verl, Alexander, editor, Bauernhansl, Thomas, editor, and Möhring, Hans-Christian, editor
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- 2023
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6. Crystal structure of aluminum catena-[monohydrogenborate-dihydrogenborate- bis(monohydrogenphosphate)] monohydrate, Al[B2P2O7(OH)5]-H2O
- Author
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Kniep R., Koch D., and Borrmann H.
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Physics ,QC1-999 ,Crystallography ,QD901-999 - Published
- 2002
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7. Epidemiology and antifungal resistance in invasive candidiasis
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Rodloff AC, Koch D, and Schaumann R
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Medicine - Abstract
Abstract The epidemiology of Candida infections has changed over the last two decades: The number of patients suffering from such infections has increased dramatically and the Candida species involved have become more numerous as Candida albicans is replaced as an infecting agent by various non-C. albicans species (NAC). At the same time, additional antifungal agents have become available. The different Candida species may vary in their susceptibility for these various antifungals. This draws more attention to in vitro susceptibility testing. Unfortunately, several different test methods exist that may deliver different results. Moreover, clinical breakpoints (CBP) that classify test results into susceptible, intermediate and resistant are controver- sial between CLSI and EUCAST. Therefore, clinicians should be aware that interpretations may vary with the test system being followed by the microbiological laboratory. Thus, knowledge of actual MIC values and pharmacokinetic properties of individual antifungal agents is important in delivering appropriate therapy to patients
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- 2011
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8. Laser powder bed fusion of anisotropic Nd-Fe-B bonded magnets utilizing an in-situ mechanical alignment approach
- Author
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Schäfer, K., Fim, R.G.T, Maccari, F., Braun, T., Riegg, S., Skokov, K.P., Koch, D., Bruder, E., Radulov, I., Ahrens, C.H., Wendhausen, P.A.P., and Gutfleisch, O.
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- 2023
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9. Crystal structure of sodium aluminum (monohydrogenmonophosphate-dihydrogenmonoborate- monophosphate), NaAl[BP2O7(0H)3]
- Author
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Koch D. and Kniep R.
- Subjects
Physics ,QC1-999 ,Crystallography ,QD901-999 - Published
- 1999
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10. Crystal structure of potassium aluminum catena-(monohydrogenmonoborate)- bis(monophosphate), KAl[BP2O8(OH)]
- Author
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Kniep R., Koch D., and Hartmann Th.
- Subjects
Physics ,QC1-999 ,Crystallography ,QD901-999 - Published
- 2002
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11. Revival of the magnetar PSR J1622-4950: observations with MeerKAT, Parkes, XMM-Newton, Swift, Chandra, and NuSTAR
- Author
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Camilo, F., Scholz, P., Serylak, M., Buchner, S., Merryfield, M., Kaspi, V. M., Archibald, R. F., Bailes, M., Jameson, A., van Straten, W., Sarkissian, J., Reynolds, J. E., Johnston, S., Hobbs, G., Abbott, T. D., Adam, R. M., Adams, G. B., Alberts, T., Andreas, R., Asad, K. M. B., Baker, D. E., Baloyi, T., Bauermeister, E. F., Baxana, T., Bennett, T. G. H., Bernardi, G., Booisen, D., Booth, R. S., Botha, D. H., Boyana, L., Brederode, L. R. S., Burger, J. P., Cheetham, T., Conradie, J., Conradie, J. P., Davidson, D. B., de Bruin, G., de Swardt, B., de Villiers, C., de Villiers, D. I. L., de Villiers, M. S., de Villiers, W., de Waal, C., Dikgale, M. A., Toit, G. du, Toit, L. J. du, Esterhuyse, S. W. P., Fanaroff, B., Fataar, S., Foley, A. R., Foster, G., Fourie, D., Gamatham, R., Gatsi, T., Geschke, R., Goedhart, S., Grobler, T. L., Gumede, S. C., Hlakola, M. J., Hokwana, A., Hoorn, D. H., Horn, D., Horrell, J., Hugo, B., Isaacson, A., Jacobs, O., van Rensburg, J. P. Jansen, Jonas, J. L., Jordaan, B., Joubert, A., Joubert, F., Jozsa, G. I. G., Julie, R., Julius, C. C., Kapp, F., Karastergiou, A., Karels, F., Kariseb, M., Karuppusamy, R., Kasper, V., Knox-Davies, E. C., Koch, D., Kotze, P. P. A., Krebs, A., Kriek, N., Kriel, H., Kusel, T., Lamoor, S., Lehmensiek, R., Liebenberg, D., Liebenberg, I., Lord, R. T., Lunsky, B., Mabombo, N., Macdonald, T., Macfarlane, P., Madisa, K., Mafhungo, L., Magnus, L. G., Magozore, C., Mahgoub, O., Main, J. P. L., Makhathini, S., Malan, J. A., Malgas, P., Manley, J. R., Manzini, M., Marais, L., Marais, N., Marais, S. J., Maree, M., Martens, A., Matshawule, S. D., Matthysen, N., Mauch, T., Nally, L. D. Mc, Merry, B., Millenaar, R. P., Mjikelo, C., Mkhabela, N., Mnyandu, N., Moeng, I. T., Mokone, O. J., Monama, T. E., Montshiwa, K., Moss, V., Mphego, M., New, W., Ngcebetsha, B., Ngoasheng, K., Niehaus, H., Ntuli, P., Nzama, A., Obies, F., Obrocka, M., Ockards, M. T., Olyn, C., Oozeer, N., Otto, A. J., Padayachee, Y., Passmoor, S., Patel, A. A., Paula, S., Peens-Hough, A., Pholoholo, B., Prozesky, P., Rakoma, S., Ramaila, A. J. T., Rammala, I., Ramudzuli, Z. R., Rasivhaga, M., Ratcliffe, S., Reader, H. C., Renil, R., Richter, L., Robyntjies, A., Rosekrans, D., Rust, A., Salie, S., Sambu, N., Schollar, C. T. G., Schwardt, L., Seranyane, S., Sethosa, G., Sharpe, C., Siebrits, R., Sirothia, S. K., Slabber, M. J., Smirnov, O., Smith, S., Sofeya, L., Songqumase, N., Spann, R., Stappers, B., Steyn, D., Steyn, T. J., Strong, R., Struthers, A., Stuart, C., Sunnylall, P., Swart, P. S., Taljaard, B., Tasse, C., Taylor, G., Theron, I. P., Thondikulam, V., Thorat, K., Tiplady, A., Toruvanda, O., van Aardt, J., van Balla, T., Heever, L. van den, van der Byl, A., van der Merwe, C., van der Merwe, P., van Niekerk, P. C., van Rooyen, R., van Staden, J. P., van Tonder, V., van Wyk, R., Wait, I., Walker, A. L., Wallace, B., Welz, M., Williams, L. P., Xaia, B., Young, N., and Zitha, S.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
New radio (MeerKAT and Parkes) and X-ray (XMM-Newton, Swift, Chandra, and NuSTAR) observations of PSR J1622-4950 indicate that the magnetar, in a quiescent state since at least early 2015, reactivated between 2017 March 19 and April 5. The radio flux density, while variable, is approximately 100x larger than during its dormant state. The X-ray flux one month after reactivation was at least 800x larger than during quiescence, and has been decaying exponentially on a 111+/-19 day timescale. This high-flux state, together with a radio-derived rotational ephemeris, enabled for the first time the detection of X-ray pulsations for this magnetar. At 5%, the 0.3-6 keV pulsed fraction is comparable to the smallest observed for magnetars. The overall pulsar geometry inferred from polarized radio emission appears to be broadly consistent with that determined 6-8 years earlier. However, rotating vector model fits suggest that we are now seeing radio emission from a different location in the magnetosphere than previously. This indicates a novel way in which radio emission from magnetars can differ from that of ordinary pulsars. The torque on the neutron star is varying rapidly and unsteadily, as is common for magnetars following outburst, having changed by a factor of 7 within six months of reactivation., Comment: Published in ApJ (2018 April 5); 13 pages, 4 figures
- Published
- 2018
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12. Distribution of pathogens and antimicrobial resistance in bacteraemia according to hospitalization duration: a nationwide surveillance study in Switzerland
- Author
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Burnens, A., Cherkaoui, A., Corradi, C., Dubuis, O., Viollier, A.G., Egli, A., Gaia, V., Koch, D., Kronenberg, A., Leib, S.L., Marschall, J., Nordmann, P., Perreten, V., Piffaretti, J.-C., Prod'hom, G., Schrenzel, J., Widmer, A.F., Zanetti, G., Zbinden, R., Buetti, Niccolò, Marschall, Jonas, Timsit, Jean-François, Atkinson, Andrew, Kronenberg, Andreas, and Sommerstein, Rami
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- 2021
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13. A Behavioral Approach to Increasing Perceptions of Capability Toward People With Disabilities
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Catrone, Rocco Giovanni and Koch, D. Shane
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- 2021
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14. Towards a fully size-consistent method of increments
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Fertitta, E., Koch, D., Paulus, B., Barcza, G., and Legeza, Ö.
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Physics - Chemical Physics ,Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons - Abstract
The method of increments (MoI) allows one to successfully calculate cohesive energies of bulk materials with high accuracy, but it encounters difficulties when calculating whole dissociation curves. The reason is that its standard formalism is based on a single Hartree-Fock (HF) configuration whose orbitals are localized and used for the many-body expansion. Therefore, in those situations where HF does not allow a size-consistent description of the dissociation, the MoI cannot yield proper results either. Herein we address the problem by employing a size-consistent multiconfigurational reference for the MoI formalism. This leads to a matrix equation where a coupling derived by the reference itself is employed. In principle, such approach allows one to evaluate approximate values for the ground as well as excited states energies. While the latter are accurate close to the avoided crossing only, the ground state results are very promising for the whole dissociation curve, as shown by the comparison with density matrix renormalization group (DMRG) benchmarks. We tested this two-state constant-coupling (TSCC)-MoI on beryllium rings of different sizes and studied the error introduced by the constant coupling.
- Published
- 2016
15. Calculation of the static and dynamical correlation energy of pseudo-one-dimensional beryllium systems via a many-body expansion
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Koch, D., Fertitta, E., and Paulus, B.
- Subjects
Physics - Chemical Physics - Abstract
Low-dimensional beryllium systems constitute interesting case studies for the test of correlation methods because of the importance of both static and dynamical correlation in the formation of the bond. Aiming to describe the whole dissociation curve of extended Be systems we chose to apply the method of increments (MoI) in its multireference (MR) formalism. However, in order to do so an insight into the wave function was necessary. Therefore we started by focusing on the description of small Be chains via standard quantum chemical methods and gave a brief analysis of the main characteristics of their wave functions. We then applied the MoI to larger beryllium systems, starting from the Be6 ring. First, the complete active space formalism (CAS-MoI) was employed and the results were used as reference for local MR calculations of the whole dissociation curve. Despite this approach is well established for the calculation of systems with limited multireference character, its application to the description of whole dissociation curves still requires further testing. After discussing the role of the basis set, the method was finally applied to larger rings and extrapolated to an infinite chain.
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- 2016
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16. Correlating changes of the unit cell parameters and microstructure with magnetic properties in the CeFe11Ti compound
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Maccari, F., Ener, S., Koch, D., Dirba, I., Skokov, K.P., Bruder, E., Schäfer, L., and Gutfleisch, O.
- Published
- 2021
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17. Decrease in soil test phosphorus levels under omitted phosphorus fertilizer application
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Steinfurth, K., Börjesson, G., Denoroy, P., Eichler-Löbermann, B., Gans, W., Heyn, J., Hirte, J., Jansen, F., Koch, D., Merbach, Ines, Mollier, A., Morel, C., Panten, K., Peiter, E., Poulton, P.R., Reitz, Thomas, Holton Rubæk, G., Spiegel, H., van Laak, M., von Tucher, S., Buczko, U., Steinfurth, K., Börjesson, G., Denoroy, P., Eichler-Löbermann, B., Gans, W., Heyn, J., Hirte, J., Jansen, F., Koch, D., Merbach, Ines, Mollier, A., Morel, C., Panten, K., Peiter, E., Poulton, P.R., Reitz, Thomas, Holton Rubæk, G., Spiegel, H., van Laak, M., von Tucher, S., and Buczko, U.
- Abstract
Many European cropped soils have high soil test P (STP) values in the top soil because of P accumulation over many years of fertilizer application. This should allow to save P fertilizer applications for some years without STP values decreasing to a level that might negatively impact crop yield. However, the way STP develops under omitted P fertilizer application is not well understood. We examined STP development under omitted P fertilizer application for timeframes between 7 and 46 years on 96 unfertilized treatments (P0 treatments) of 43 European long-term P field experiments, using five different STP methods. For comparability, values obtained by different STP methods were converted to Olsen-P concentrations. We fitted exponential decay curves to Olsen-P data of each P0 treatment defined by initial Olsen-P values (Olsen-Pi), rates of decrease (k) and asymptotes (A), reflecting minimum obtainable STP. Subsequently, we analysed whether the variables most commonly recorded in experiments, are sufficient to explain the variation in model parameters, these variables being P export, clay content, Corg and pH as well as average annual temperature and precipitation. We found that out of our predictor variables, soil clay content, precipitation and temperature were showing the most prominent effects on the parameters Olsen-Pi, A or k. However, the amount of variation explained by the considered variables was too low to potentially facilitate a prediction of STP decrease, and various P0 treatments showed no clear Olsen-P decrease or unexpectedly high asymptotes. This hints at a strong influence of the P sorption capacity of the soil with often high potential for replenishment from less available P pools. In connection with P introduction from the subsoil or possibly from surrounding plots, the extension of timeframes of omitted P fertilizer application without reaching critical STP values for crop production, might be explainable. Corresponding effects could not be analys
- Published
- 2024
18. Non-invasive physical plasma for preventing radiation dermatitis in breast cancer: Results from an intrapatient-randomised double-blind placebo-controlled trial
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Dejonckheere, C.S., Layer, J.P., Nour, Y., Layer, K., Glasmacher, A., Wiegreffe, S., Fuhrmann, A., Caglayan, L., Grau, F., Sarria, G.R., Scafa, D., Koch, D., Heimann, M., Leitzen, C., Köksal, M.A., Rohner, F., Müdder, T., Dejonckheere, E., Schmeel, F.C., Anzbock, T., Lindner, K., Bachmann, A., Abramian, A., Kaiser, C., Faridi, A., Mustea, A., Giordano, F.A., Stope, M.B., Schmeel, L.C., Dejonckheere, C.S., Layer, J.P., Nour, Y., Layer, K., Glasmacher, A., Wiegreffe, S., Fuhrmann, A., Caglayan, L., Grau, F., Sarria, G.R., Scafa, D., Koch, D., Heimann, M., Leitzen, C., Köksal, M.A., Rohner, F., Müdder, T., Dejonckheere, E., Schmeel, F.C., Anzbock, T., Lindner, K., Bachmann, A., Abramian, A., Kaiser, C., Faridi, A., Mustea, A., Giordano, F.A., Stope, M.B., and Schmeel, L.C.
- Abstract
Background and Purpose To investigate the effect of topical non-invasive physical plasma (NIPP), a volatile mix generated out of ambient air, on prevention of acute radiation dermatitis (RD) during and after whole-breast irradiation (WBI). Materials and Methods Lateral and medial breast halves were randomised within each patient to receive either 120 s of NIPP or sham treatment daily during WBI. Standard skin care with urea lotion was applied to the whole breast. Blinded acute skin toxicity was assessed weekly for each breast half separately and included clinician-(CTCAE) and patient-reported (modified RISRAS), and objective (spectrophotometry) assessments. As an additional external control, a comparable standard of care (SoC) patient collective from a previous prospective trial was used. Results Sixty-four patients were included. There were no significant differences between breast halves. Post-hoc comparison with a similar SoC control collective revealed OR = 0.28 (95% CI 0.11–0.76; p = 0.014) for grade ≥ 2 RD upon WBI completion, along with less hyperpigmentation (p < 0.001), oedema (p = 0.020), dry (p < 0.001) and moist desquamation (p = 0.017), pain, itching, and burning (p < 0.001 for each). Tolerability of NIPP was excellent and side effects were not observed. Conclusion Even though there were no differences between intrapatient-randomised breast halves, the overall incidence and severity of acute radiation-induced skin toxicity were considerably lower when compared to a prospectively collected SoC cohort. Our data suggest the potential benefit of NIPP in RD prevention. A randomised trial with a physical control group is warranted to confirm these promising results (DRKS00026225).
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- 2024
19. Initial Investigation into the Effects of Tissue Plasminogen Activator on Intrasynovial Tenocytes In Vitro
- Author
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Connard, S. C., additional, Koch, D. W., additional, Coleman, C. V., additional, Froneberger, A. M., additional, Long, J. M., additional, and Schnabel, L. V., additional
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- 2024
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20. Unit Quaternions and the Bloch Sphere
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Wharton, K. B. and Koch, D.
- Subjects
Quantum Physics ,20G45 - Abstract
The spinor representation of spin-1/2 states can equally well be mapped to a single unit quaternion, yielding a new perspective despite the equivalent mathematics. This paper first demonstrates a useable map that allows Bloch-sphere rotations to be represented as quaternionic multiplications, simplifying the form of the dynamical equations. Left-multiplications generally correspond to non-unitary transformations, providing a simpler (essentially classical) analysis of time-reversal. But the quaternion viewpoint also reveals a surprisingly large broken symmetry, as well as a potential way to restore it, via a natural expansion of the state space that has parallels to second order fermions. This expansion to "second order qubits" would imply either a larger gauge freedom or a natural space of hidden variables., Comment: 25 pages, 1 figure; Referee-inspired improvements; accepted for publication in J. Phys. A
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- 2014
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21. The Future Is Female (and Behavior Analysis): A Behavioral Account of Sexism and How Behavior Analysis Is Simultaneously Part of the Problem and Solution
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Baires, Natalia A. and Koch, D. Shane
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- 2020
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22. Development of an innovative combustion process: Spark-assisted compression ignition
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Chiodi, M., Kächele, Andreas, Bargende, Michael, Koch, D., Wachtmeister, G., Wichelhaus, D., Bargende, Michael, editor, Reuss, Hans-Christian, editor, and Wiedemann, Jochen, editor
- Published
- 2018
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23. Towards a business model for second-life batteries: Barriers, opportunities, uncertainties, and technologies
- Author
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Rufino Junior C. A., Riva Sanseverino E., Gallo P., Koch D., Kotak Y., Schweiger H. -G., Zanin H., Rufino Junior C.A., Riva Sanseverino E., Gallo P., Koch D., Kotak Y., Schweiger H.-G., and Zanin H.
- Subjects
Settore ING-IND/33 - Sistemi Elettrici Per L'Energia ,Settore ING-INF/05 - Sistemi Di Elaborazione Delle Informazioni ,Fuel Technology ,Electrochemistry ,Energy Engineering and Power Technology ,Business models, Batteries, Sustainability, Electric vehicles, Challenges, Opportunities, Lithium-ion batteries, Reuse ,Energy (miscellaneous) - Abstract
Electric vehicles (EVs) and the recent pandemic outbreak give cities a new trend to primarily private and shared mobility with low noise and less air pollution. Crucial factors for the widespread of EVs are the electrical charging infrastructure, driving range, and the reduction of the cost of battery packets. For this reason, there is a massive effort from manufacturers, governments, and the scientific community to reduce battery costs and boost sustainable electrical production and distribution. Battery reuse is an alternative to reduce batteries’ costs and environmental impacts. Second-life batteries can be used in a wide variety of secondary applications. Second-life batteries can be connected with off-grid or on-grid photovoltaic and wind systems, vehicle charging stations, forklifts, and frequency control. The present work aims to analyze the main challenges imposed on the reuse of batteries, the leading technologies for their reuse, and the different types of batteries in terms of their feasibility for second-life use. The main novelty of this work is the discussion about the barriers, opportunities, uncertainties, and technologies for the second life market. Here we summarize the present state of the art in reusing lithium-ion batteries discussing technical and economic feasibility, environmental impacts, and perspectives. The results show five business models that have been proposed in the literature, three types of markets for trading second-life batteries, and the main opportunities and barriers for each actor in the battery supply chain.
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- 2023
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24. The architecture of the hierarchical triple star KOI 928 from eclipse timing variations seen in Kepler photometry
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Steffen, J. H., Quinn, S. N., Borucki, W. J., Brugamyer, E., Bryson, S. T., Buchhave, L. A., Cochran, W. D., Endl, M., Fabrycky, D. C., Ford, E. B., Holman, M. J., Jenkins, J., Koch, D., Latham, D. W., MacQueen, P., Mullally, F., Prsa, A., Ragozzine, D., Rowe, J. F., Sanderfer, D. T., Seader, S. E., Short, D., Shporer, A., Thompson, S. E., Torres, G., Twicken, J. D., Welsh, W. F., and Windmiller, G.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a hierarchical triple star system (KIC 9140402) where a low mass eclipsing binary orbits a more massive third star. The orbital period of the binary (4.98829 Days) is determined by the eclipse times seen in photometry from NASA's Kepler spacecraft. The periodically changing tidal field, due to the eccentric orbit of the binary about the tertiary, causes a change in the orbital period of the binary. The resulting eclipse timing variations provide insight into the dynamics and architecture of this system and allow the inference of the total mass of the binary ($0.424 \pm 0.017 \text{M}_\odot$) and the orbital parameters of the binary about the central star., Comment: Submitted to MNRAS Letters. Additional tables with eclipse times are included here. The Kepler data that was used for the analysis of this system (Q1 through Q6) will be available on MAST after June 27, 2011
- Published
- 2011
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25. Predicting the detectability of oscillations in solar-type stars observed by Kepler
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Chaplin, W. J., Kjeldsen, H., Bedding, T. R., Christensen-Dalsgaard, J., Gilliland, R. L., Kawaler, S. D., Appourchaux, T., Elsworth, Y., Garcia, R. A., Houdek, G., Karoff, C., Metcalfe, T. S., Molenda-Zakowicz, J., Monteiro, M. J. P. F. G., Thompson, M. J., Verner, G. A., Batalha, N., Borucki, W. J., Brown, T. M., Bryson, S. T., Christiansen, J. L., Clarke, B. D., Jenkins, J. M., Klaus, T. C., Koch, D., An, D., Ballot, J., Basu, S., Benomar, O., Bonanno, A., Broomhall, A. -M., Campante, T. L., Corsaro, E., Creevey, O. L., Esch, L., Gai, N., Gaulme, P., Hale, S. J., Handberg, R., Hekker, S., Huber, D., Mathur, S., Mosser, B., New, R., Pinsonneault, M. H., Pricopi, D., Quirion, P. -O., Regulo, C., Roxburgh, I. W., Salabert, D., Stello, D., and Suran, M. D.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Asteroseismology of solar-type stars has an important part to play in the exoplanet program of the NASA Kepler Mission. Precise and accurate inferences on the stellar properties that are made possible by the seismic data allow very tight constraints to be placed on the exoplanetary systems. Here, we outline how to make an estimate of the detectability of solar-like oscillations in any given Kepler target, using rough estimates of the temperature and radius, and the Kepler apparent magnitude., Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication Astrophysical Journal
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- 2011
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26. Kepler photometry of the prototypical Blazhko star RR Lyr: An old friend seen in a new light
- Author
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Kolenberg, K., Bryson, S., Szabó, R., Kurtz, D. W., Smolec, R., Nemec, J. M., Guggenberger, E., Moskalik, P., Benkő, J. M., Chadid, M., Jeon, Y. -B., Kiss, L. L., Kopacki, G., Nuspl, J., Still, M., Christensen-Dalsgaard, J., Kjeldsen, H., Borucki, W. J., Caldwell, D. A., Jenkins, J. M., and Koch, D.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present our analysis of the long cadence Kepler data for the well-studied Blazhko star RR Lyr, gathered during the first two quarters of the satellite's observations and covering a total of 127d. Besides being of great importance for our understanding of RR Lyrae stars in general, these RR Lyr data can be regarded as a case study for observations of bright stars with Kepler. Kepler can perform high-precision photometry on targets like RR Lyr, as the saturated flux is conserved to a very high degree. The Kepler data on RR Lyr are revolutionary in several respects. Even with long-cadence sampling (one measurement per 29.4 min), the unprecedented precision (< mmag) of the Kepler photometry allows the study of the star's extreme light curve variations in detail. The multiplet structures at the main frequency and its harmonics, typical for Blazhko stars, are clearly detected up to the quintuplets. For the first time, photometric data of RR Lyr reveal the presence of half-integer frequencies, linked to a period doubling effect. This phenomenon may be connected to the still unexplained Blazhko modulation. Moreover, with three observed Blazhko cycles at our disposal, we observe that there is no exact repetition in the light curve changes from one modulation cycle to the next for RR Lyr. This may be due to additional periodicities in the star, or to transient or quasi-periodic changes., Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
- Published
- 2010
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27. Asteroseismology of red giants from the first four months of Kepler data: Fundamental parameters
- Author
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Kallinger, T., Mosser, B., Hekker, S., Huber, D., Stello, D., Mathur, S., Basu, S., Bedding, T. R., Chaplin, W. J., De Ridder, J., Elsworth, Y. P., Frandsen, S., Garcia, R. A., Gruberbauer, M., Matthews, J. M., Borucki, W. J., Bruntt, H., Christensen-Dalsgaard, J., Gilliland, R. L., Kjeldsen, H., and Koch, D. G.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Clear power excess in a frequency range typical for solar-type oscillations in red giants has been detected in more than 1000 stars, which have been observed during the first 138 days of the science operation of the NASA Kepler satellite. This sample includes stars in a wide mass and radius range with spectral types G and K, extending in luminosity from the bottom of the giant branch up to high-luminous red giants. The high-precision asteroseismic observations with Kepler provide a perfect source for testing stellar structure and evolutionary models, as well as investigating the stellar population in our Galaxy. We fit a global model to the observed frequency spectra, which allows us to accurately estimate the granulation background signal and the global oscillation parameters, such as the frequency of maximum oscillation power. We find regular patterns of radial and non-radial oscillation modes and use a new technique to automatically identify the mode degree and the characteristic frequency separations between consecutive modes of the same spherical degree. In most cases, we can also measure the small separation. The seismic parameters are used to estimate stellar masses and radii and to place the stars in an H-R diagram by using an extensive grid of stellar models that covers a wide parameter range. Using Bayesian techniques throughout our analysis allows us to determine reliable uncertainties for all parameters. We provide accurate seismic parameters and their uncertainties for a large sample of red giants and determine their asteroseismic fundamental parameters. We investigate the influence of the stars' metallicities on their positions in the H-R diagram. We study the red-giant populations in the red clump and bump and compare them to a synthetic population and find a mass and metallicity gradient in the red clump and clear evidence of a secondary-clump population., Comment: accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics, 14 pages, 13 figures
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- 2010
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28. Asteroseismology of red giants from the first four months of Kepler data: Global oscillation parameters for 800 stars
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Huber, D., Bedding, T. R., Stello, D., Mosser, B., Mathur, S., Kallinger, T., Hekker, S., Elsworth, Y. P., Buzasi, D. L., De Ridder, J., Gilliland, R. L., Kjeldsen, H., Chaplin, W. J., Garcia, R. A., Hale, S. J., Preston, H. L., White, T. R., Borucki, W. J., Christensen-Dalsgaard, J., Clarke, B. D., Jenkins, J. M., and Koch, D.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We have studied solar-like oscillations in ~800 red-giant stars using Kepler long-cadence photometry. The sample includes stars ranging in evolution from the lower part of the red-giant branch to the Helium main sequence. We investigate the relation between the large frequency separation (Delta nu) and the frequency of maximum power (nu_max) and show that it is different for red giants than for main-sequence stars, which is consistent with evolutionary models and scaling relations. The distributions of nu_max and Delta nu are in qualitative agreement with a simple stellar population model of the Kepler field, including the first evidence for a secondary clump population characterized by M ~> 2 M_sun and nu_max ~ 40-110 muHz. We measured the small frequency separations delta nu_02 and delta nu_01 in over 400 stars and delta nu_03 in over 40. We present C-D diagrams for l=1, 2 and 3 and show that the frequency separation ratios delta nu_02/Delta nu and delta nu_01/Delta nu have opposite trends as a function of Delta nu. The data show a narrowing of the l=1 ridge towards lower nu_max, in agreement with models predicting more efficient mode trapping in stars with higher luminosity. We investigate the offset epsilon in the asymptotic relation and find a clear correlation with Delta nu, demonstrating that it is related to fundamental stellar parameters. Finally, we present the first amplitude-nu_max relation for Kepler red giants. We observe a lack of low-amplitude stars for nu_max ~> 110 muHz and find that, for a given nu_max between 40-110 muHz, stars with lower Delta nu (and consequently higher mass) tend to show lower amplitudes than stars with higher Delta nu., Comment: 12 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2010
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29. A precise asteroseismic age and radius for the evolved Sun-like star KIC 11026764
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Metcalfe, T. S., Monteiro, M. J. P. F. G., Thompson, M. J., Molenda-Zakowicz, J., Appourchaux, T., Chaplin, W. J., Dogan, G., Eggenberger, P., Bedding, T. R., Bruntt, H., Creevey, O. L., Quirion, P. -O., Stello, D., Bonanno, A., Aguirre, V. Silva, Basu, S., Esch, L., Gai, N., Di Mauro, M. P., Kosovichev, A. G., Kitiashvili, I. N., Suarez, J. C., Moya, A., Piau, L., Garcia, R. A., Marques, J. P., Frasca, A., Biazzo, K., Sousa, S. G., Dreizler, S., Bazot, M., Karoff, C., Frandsen, S., Wilson, P. A., Brown, T. M., Christensen-Dalsgaard, J., Gilliland, R. L., Kjeldsen, H., Campante, T. L., Fletcher, S. T., Handberg, R., Regulo, C., Salabert, D., Schou, J., Verner, G. A., Ballot, J., Broomhall, A. -M., Elsworth, Y., Hekker, S., Huber, D., Mathur, S., New, R., Roxburgh, I. W., Sato, K. H., White, T. R., Borucki, W. J., Koch, D. G., and Jenkins, J. M.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
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. (2010) 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., Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures, 4 tables, ApJ in press
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- 2010
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30. Kepler observations of the beaming binary KPD 1946+4340
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Bloemen, S., Marsh, T. R., Østensen, R. H., Charpinet, S., Fontaine, G., Degroote, P., Heber, U., Kawaler, S. D., Aerts, C., Green, E. M., Telting, J., Brassard, P., Gänsicke, B. T., Handler, G., Kurtz, D. W., Silvotti, R., Van Grootel, V., Lindberg, J. E., Pursimo, T., Wilson, P. A., Gilliland, R. L., Kjeldsen, H., Christensen-Dalsgaard, J., Borucki, W. J., Koch, D., Jenkins, J. M., and Klaus, T. C.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The Kepler Mission has acquired 33.5d of continuous one-minute photometry of KPD 1946+4340, a short-period binary system that consists of an sdB and a white dwarf. In the light curve, eclipses are clearly seen, with the deepest occurring when the compact white dwarf crosses the disc of the sdB (0.4%) and the more shallow ones (0.1%) when the sdB eclipses the white dwarf. As expected, the sdB is deformed by the gravitational field of the white dwarf, which produces an ellipsoidal modulation of the light curve. Spectacularly, a very strong Doppler beaming (aka Doppler boosting) effect is also clearly evident at the 0.1% level. This originates from the sdB's orbital velocity, which we measure to be 164.0\pm1.9 km/s from supporting spectroscopy. We present light curve models that account for all these effects, as well as gravitational lensing. We derive system parameters and uncertainties from the light curve using Markov Chain Monte Carlo simulations. Adopting a theoretical white dwarf mass-radius relation, the mass of the subdwarf is found to be 0.47\pm0.03 Msun and the mass of the white dwarf 0.59\pm0.02 Msun. The effective temperature of the white dwarf is 15 900\pm300K. With a spectroscopic effective temperature of Teff = 34 730\pm250K and a surface gravity of log g = 5.43\pm0.04, the sdB is in a shell He burning stage. The detection of Doppler beaming in Kepler light curves potentially allows one to measure radial velocities without the need of spectroscopic data. For the first time, a photometrically observed Doppler beaming amplitude is compared to a spectroscopically established value. The sdB's radial velocity amplitude derived from the photometry 168\pm4 km/s is in perfect agreement with the spectroscopic value. After subtracting our best model for the orbital effects, we searched the residuals for stellar oscillations but did not find any significant pulsation frequencies., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS on August 18, 2010
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- 2010
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31. Atmospheric parameters and pulsational properties for a sample of $\delta$\,Sct, $\gamma$\,Dor, and hybrid {\it Kepler} targets
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Catanzaro, G., Ripepi, V., Bernabei, S., Marconi, M., Balona, L., Kurtz, D. W., Smalley, B., Borucki, W. J., Bruntt, H., Christensen-Dalsgaard, J., Grigahcene, A., Kjeldsen, H., Koch, D. G., Monteiro, M. J. P. F. G., Suarez, J. C., Szabo, R., and Uytterhoeven, K.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report spectroscopic observations for 19 $\delta$\,Sct candidates observed by the {\it Kepler} satellite both in long and short cadence mode. For all these stars, by using spectral synthesis, we derive the effective temperature, the surface gravity and the projected rotational velocity. An equivalent spectral type classification has been also performed for all stars in the sample. These determinations are fundamental for modelling the frequency spectra that will be extracted from the {\it Kepler} data for asteroseismic inference. For all the 19 stars, we present also periodograms obtained from {\it Kepler} data. We find that all stars show peaks in both low- ($\gamma$\,Dor; g mode) and high-frequency ($\delta$\,Sct; p mode) regions. Using the amplitudes and considering 5\,c/d as a boundary frequency, we classified 3 stars as pure $\gamma$\,Dor, 4 as $\gamma$\,Dor\,-\,$\delta$\ hybrid, Sct, 5 as $\delta$\,Sct\,-\,$\gamma$\,Dor hybrid, and 6 as pure $\delta$\,Sct. The only exception is the star KIC\,05296877 which we suggest could be a binary., Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, MNRAS main journal
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- 2010
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32. Solar-like oscillations in red giants observed with Kepler: comparison of global oscillation parameters from different methods
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Hekker, S., Elsworth, Y., De Ridder, J., Mosser, B., Garcia, R. A., Kallinger, T., Mathur, S., Huber, D., Buzasi, D. L., Preston, H. L., Hale, S. J., Ballot, J., Chaplin, W. J., Regulo, C., Bedding, T. R., Stello, D., Borucki, W. J., Koch, D. G., Jenkins, J., Allen, C., Gilliland, R. L., Kjeldsen, H., and Christensen-Dalsgaard, J.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The large number of stars for which uninterrupted high-precision photometric timeseries data are being collected with \textit{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 (nu_max) and the mean large separation (
) 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 nu_max and due to differences in realization noise are not negligible and should be taken into account when using these results for stellar modelling., Comment: 11 pages, 9 Figures and 7 tables, accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics - Published
- 2010
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33. First Kepler results on compact pulsators II: KIC 010139564, a new pulsating subdwarf B (V361 Hya) star with an additional low-frequency mode
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Kawaler, Steven D., Reed, M. D., Quint, A. C., Østensen, R. H., Silvotti, R., Baran, A. S., Charpinet, S., Bloemen, S., Kurtz, D. W., Telting, J., Handler, G., Kjeldsen, H., Christensen-Dalsgaard, J., Borucki, W. J., Koch, D. G., and Robinson, J.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the discovery of nonradial pulsations in a hot subdwarf B star based on 30.5 days of nearly continuous time-series photometry using the \emph{Kepler} spacecraft. KIC 010139564 is found to be a short-period pulsator of the V361 Hya (EC 14026) class with more than 10 independent pulsation modes whose periods range from 130 to 190 seconds. It also shows one periodicity at a period of 3165 seconds. If this periodicity is a high order g-mode, then this star may be the hottest member of the hybrid DW Lyn stars. In addition to the resolved pulsation frequencies, additional periodic variations in the light curve suggest that a significant number of additional pulsation frequencies may be present. The long duration of the run, the extremely high duty cycle, and the well-behaved noise properties allow us to explore the stability of the periodic variations, and to place strong constraints on how many of them are independent stellar oscillation modes. We find that most of the identified periodicities are indeed stable in phase and amplitude, suggesting a rotation period of 2-3 weeks for this star, but further observations are needed to confirm this suspicion., Comment: 10 pages, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2010
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34. First Kepler results on compact pulsators V: Slowly pulsating subdwarf B stars in short-period binaries
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Kawaler, S. D., Reed, M. D., Østensen, R. H., Bloemen, S., Kurtz, D. W., Quint, A. C., Silvotti, R., Baran, A. S., Green, E. M., Charpinet, S., Telting, J., Aerts, C., Handler, G., Kjeldsen, H., Christensen-Dalsgaard, J., Borucki, W. J., Koch, D. G., and Robinson, J.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The survey phase of the Kepler Mission includes a number of hot subdwarf B (sdB) stars to search for nonradial pulsations. We present our analysis of two sdB stars that are found to be g-mode pulsators of the V1093 Her class. These two stars also display the distinct irradiation effect typical of sdB stars with a close M-dwarf companion with orbital periods of less than half a day. Because the orbital period is so short, the stars should be in synchronous rotation, and if so, the rotation period should imprint itself on the multiplet structure of the pulsations. However, we do not find clear evidence for such rotational splitting. Though the stars do show some frequency spacings that are consistent with synchronous rotation, they also display multiplets with splittings that are much smaller. Longer-duration time series photometry will be needed to determine if those small splittings are in fact rotational splitting, or caused by slow amplitude or phase modulation. Further data should also improve the signal-to-noise, perhaps revealing lower amplitude periodicities that could confirm the expectation of synchronous rotation. The pulsation periods seen in these stars show period spacings that are suggestive of high-overtone g-mode pulsations., Comment: accepted for publication in MNRAS, 9 pages, 3 figures, 6 tables
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- 2010
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35. First Kepler results on compact pulsators III: Subdwarf B stars with V1093~Her and hybrid (DW~Lyn) type pulsations
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Reed, M. D., Kawaler, S. D., Ostensen, R. H., Bloemen, S., Baran, A., Telting, J. H., Silvotti, R., Charpinet, S., Quint, A. C., Handler, G., Gilliland, R. L., Borucki, W. J., Koch, D. G., Kjeldsen, H., and Christensen-Dalsgaard, J.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the discovery of nonradial pulsations in five hot subdwarf B (sdB) stars based on 27 days of nearly continuous time-series photometry using the Kepler spacecraft. We find that every sdB star cooler than $\approx 27\,500\,$K that Kepler has observed (seven so far) is a long-period pulsator of the V1093~Her (PG~1716) class or a hybrid star with both short and long periods. The apparently non-binary long-period and hybrid pulsators are described here. The V1093~Her periods range from one to 4.5~h and are associated with $g-$mode pulsations. Three stars also exhibit short periods indicative of $p-$modes with periods of 2 to 5~m and in addition, these stars exhibit periodicities between both classes from 15 to 45~m. We detect the coolest and longest-period V1093~Her-type pulsator to date, KIC010670103 ($T_eff\approx 20\,900\,$K, $P_max\approx 4.5$~h) as well as a suspected hybrid pulsator, KIC002697388 which is extremely cool ($T_{\rm eff}\approx 23\,900\,$K) and for the first time hybrid pulsators which have larger $g-$mode amplitudes than $p-$mode ones. All of these pulsators are quite rich with many frequencies and we are able to apply asymptotic relationships to associate periodicities with modes for KIC010670103. Kepler data are particularly well-suited for these studies as they are long-duration, extremely high duty cycle observations with well-behaved noise properties., Comment: 23 pages, 10 figures, 5 tables, accepted to MNRAS
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- 2010
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36. Flavours of variability: 29 RR Lyrae stars observed with Kepler
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Benkő, J. M., Kolenberg, K., Szabó, R., Kurtz, D. W., Bryson, S., Bregman, J., Still, M., Smolec, R., Nuspl, J., Nemec, J., Moskalik, P., Kopacki, G., Kolláth, Z., Guggenberger, E., Di~Criscienzo, M., Christensen-Dalsgaard, J., Kjeldsen, H., Borucki, W. J., Koch, D., Jenkins, J. M., and Van Cleve, J. E.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present our analysis of Kepler observations of 29 RR Lyrae stars, based on 138-d of observation. We report precise pulsation periods for all stars. Nine of these stars had incorrect or unknown periods in the literature. Fourteen of the stars exhibit both amplitude and phase Blazhko modulations, with Blazhko periods ranging from 27.7 to more than 200 days. For V445 Lyr, a longer secondary variation is also observed in addition to its 53.2-d Blazhko period. The unprecedented precision of the Kepler photometry has led to the discovery of the the smallest modulations detected so far. Moreover, additional frequencies beyond the well-known harmonics and Blazhko multiplets have been found. These frequencies are located around the half-integer multiples of the main pulsation frequency for at least three stars. In four stars, these frequencies are close to the first and/or second overtone modes. The amplitudes of these periodicities seem to vary over the Blazhko cycle. V350 Lyr, a non-Blazhko star in our sample, is the first example of a double mode RR Lyrae star that pulsates in its fundamental and second overtone modes., Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures 2 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2010
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37. Does Kepler unveil the mystery of the Blazhko effect? First detection of period doubling in Kepler Blazhko RR Lyrae stars
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Szabó, R., Kolláth, Z., Molnár, L., Kolenberg, K., Kurtz, D. W., Bryson, S. T., Benko, J. M., Christensen-Dalsgaard, J., Kjeldsen, H., Borucki, W. J., Koch, D., Twicken, J. D., Chadid, M., Di Criscienzo, M., Jeon, Y-B., Moskalik, P., Nemec, J. M., and Nuspl, J.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The first detection of the period doubling phenomenon is reported in the Kepler RR Lyrae stars RR Lyr, V808 Cyg and V355 Lyr. Interestingly, all these pulsating stars show Blazhko modulation. The period doubling manifests itself as alternating maxima and minima of the pulsational cycles in the light curve, as well as through the appearance of half-integer frequencies located halfway between the main pulsation period and its harmonics in the frequency spectrum. The effect was found to be stronger during certain phases of the modulation cycle. We were able to reproduce the period doubling bifurcation in our nonlinear RR Lyrae models computed by the Florida-Budapest hydrocode. This enabled us to trace the origin of this instability in RR Lyrae stars to a resonance, namely a 9:2 resonance between the fundamental mode and a high-order (9th) radial overtone showing strange-mode characteristics. We discuss the connection of this new type of variation to the mysterious Blazhko effect and argue that it may give us fresh insights to solve this century-old enigma., Comment: 10 pages, 12 figures and 1 table, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2010
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38. First Kepler results on compact pulsators I. Survey target selection and the first pulsators
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Østensen, R. H., Silvotti, R., Charpinet, S., Oreiro, R., Handler, G., Green, E. M., Bloemen, S., Heber, U., Gänsicke, B. T., Marsh, T. R., Kurtz, D. W., Telting, J. H., Reed, M. D., Kawaler, S. D., Aerts, C., Rodríguez-López, C., Vučković, M., Ottosen, T. A., Liimets, T., Quint, A. C., Van Grootel, V., Randall, S. K., Gilliland, R. L., Kjeldsen, H., Christensen-Dalsgaard, J., Borucki, W. J., Koch, D., and Quintana, E. V.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present results from the first two quarters of a survey to search for pulsations in compact stellar objects with the Kepler spacecraft. The survey sample and the various methods applied in its compilation are described, and spectroscopic observations are presented to separate the objects into accurate classes. From the Kepler photometry we clearly identify nine compact pulsators, and a number of interesting binary stars. Of the pulsators, one shows the strong, rapid pulsations typical for a V361 Hya type sdB variable (sdBV), seven show long-period pulsations characteristic of V1093 Her type sdBVs, and one shows low-amplitude pulsations with both short and long periods. We derive effective temperatures and surface gravities for all the subdwarf B stars in the sample and demonstrate that below the boundary region where hybrid sdB pulsators are found, all our targets are pulsating. For the stars hotter than this boundary temperature a low fraction of strong pulsators (<10 per cent) is confirmed. Interestingly, the short-period pulsator also shows a low-amplitude mode in the long-period region, and several of the V1093 Her pulsators show low amplitude modes in the short-period region, indicating that hybrid behaviour may be common in these stars, also outside the boundary temperature region where hybrid pulsators have hitherto been found., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2010
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39. The Kepler Asteroseismic Investigation: Scientific goals and the first results
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Kjeldsen, H., Christensen-Dalsgaard, J., Handberg, R., Brown, T. M., Gilliland, R. L., Borucki, W. J., and Koch, D.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Kepler is a NASA mission designed to detect exoplanets and characterize the properties of exoplanetary systems. Kepler also includes an asteroseismic programme which is being conducted through the Kepler Asteroseismic Science Consortium (KASC), whose 400 members are organized into 13 working groups by type of variable star. So far data have been available from the first 7 month of the mission containing a total of 2937 targets observed at a 1-min. cadence for periods between 10 days and 7 months. The goals of the asteroseismic part of the Kepler project is to perform detailed studies of stellar interiors. The first results of the asteroseismic analysis are orders of magnitude better than seen before, and this bodes well for how the future analysis of Kepler data for many types of stars will impact our general understanding of stellar structure and evolution., Comment: Proc. HELAS IV Conference, Lanzarote, January 2010. Eds T. Roca Cort\'es, P. Pall\'e and S. Jim\'enez Reyes. To appear in Astron. Nachr
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- 2010
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40. 2M1938+4603: A rich, multimode pulsating sdB star with an eclipsing dM companion observed with Kepler
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Østensen, R. H., Green, E. M., Bloemen, S., Marsh, T. R., Laird, J. B., Morris, M., Moriyama, E., Oreiro, R., Reed, M. D., Kawaler, S. D., Aerts, C., Vuckovic, M., Degroote, P., Telting, J. H., Kjeldsen, H., Gilliland, R. L., Christensen-Dalsgaard, J., Borucki, W. J., and Koch, D.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
2M1938+4603 (KIC 9472174) displays a spectacular light curve dominated by a strong reflection effect and rather shallow, grazing eclipses. The orbital period is 0.126 days, the second longest period yet found for an eclipsing sdB+dM, but still close to the minimum 0.1-d period among such systems. The phase-folded light curve was used to detrend the orbital effects from the dataset, and the resulting amplitude spectrum shows a rich collection of pulsation peaks spanning frequencies from ~50 to 4500 uHz. The presence of a complex pulsation spectrum in both the p-mode and the g-mode regions has never been seen before in a compact pulsator. Eclipsing sdB+dM stars are very rare, with only seven systems known and only one with a pulsating primary. Pulsating stars in eclipsing binaries are especially important since they permit masses derived from seismological model fits to be cross checked with orbital mass constraints. We present a first analysis of this star based on the Kepler 9.7-day commissioning light curve and extensive ground-based photometry and spectroscopy that allow us to set useful bounds on the system parameters. We derive a radial-velocity amplitude K_1 = 65.7 +/- 0.6 km/s, inclination angle i = 69.45 +/- 0.20 degrees, and find that the masses of the components are M_1 = 0.48 +/- 0.03 and M_2 = 0.12 +/- 0.01 solar masses., Comment: 5 pages with 3 figures, and 4 appendix pages with 2 figures and 3 tables, submitted to MNRAS
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- 2010
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41. Hybrid gamma Doradus - delta Scuti pulsators: New insights into the physics of the oscillations from Kepler observations
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Grigahcene, A., Antoci, V., Balona, L., Catanzaro, G., Daszynska-Daszkiewicz, J., Guzik, J. A., Handler, G., Houdek, G., Kurtz, D. W., Marconi, M., Monteiro, M. J. P. F. G., Moya, A., Ripepi, V., Suarez, J. -C., Uytterhoeven, K., Borucki, W. J., Brown, T. M., Christensen-Dalsgaard, J., Gilliland, R. L., Jenkins, J. M., Kjeldsen, H., Koch, D., Bernabei, S., Bradley, P., Breger, M., Di Criscienzo, M., Dupret, M. -A., Garcia, R. A., Hernandez, A. Garcia, Jackiewicz, J., Kaiser, A., Lehmann, H., Marin-Ruiz, S., Mathias, P., Molenda-Zakowicz, J., Nemec, J. M., Nuspl, J., Paparo, M., Roth, M., Szabo, R., Suran, M. D., and Ventura, R.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Observations of the pulsations of stars can be used to infer their interior structure and test theoretical models. The main sequence $\gamma$ Doradus (Dor) and $\delta$ Scuti (Sct) stars with masses 1.2-2.5 $M_{\sun}$ are particularly useful for these studies. The $\gamma$ Dor stars pulsate in high-order $g$ modes with periods of order 1 day, driven by convective blocking at the base of their envelope convection zone. The $\delta$ Sct stars pulsate in low-order $g$ and $p$ modes with periods of order 2 hours, driven by the $\kappa$ mechanism operating in the Heii ionization zone. Theory predicts an overlap region in the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram between instability regions, where 'hybrid' stars pulsating in both types of modes should exist. The two types of modes with properties governed by different portions of the stellar interior provide complementary model constraints. Among the known $\gamma$ Dor and $\delta$ Sct stars, only four have been confirmed as hybrids. Now, analysis of combined Quarter 0 and Quarter 1 Kepler data for hundreds of variable stars shows that the frequency spectra are so rich that there are practically no pure $\delta$ Sct or $\gamma$ Dor pulsators, i.e. essentially all of the stars show frequencies in both the $\delta$ Sct and $\gamma$ Dor frequency range. A new observational classification scheme is proposed that takes into account the amplitude as well as the frequency, and is applied to categorize 234 stars as $\delta$ Sct, $\gamma$ Dor, $\delta$ Sct/$\gamma$ Dor or $\gamma$ Dor/$\delta$ Sct hybrids., Comment: 6 pages with 4 figures and 1 table - submitted to ApJL
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- 2010
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42. Automated classification of variable stars in the asteroseismology program of the Kepler space mission
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Blomme, J., Debosscher, J., De Ridder, J., Aerts, C., Gilliland, R. L., Christensen-Dalsgaard, J., Kjeldsen, H., Brown, T. M., Borucki, W. J., Koch, D., Jenkins, J. M., Kurtz, D. W., Stello, D., Stevens, I. R., Suran, M. D., and Derekas, A.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the first results of the application of supervised classification methods to the Kepler Q1 long-cadence light curves of a subsample of 2288 stars measured in the asteroseismology program of the mission. The methods, originally developed in the framework of the CoRoT and Gaia space missions, are capable of identifying the most common types of stellar variability in a reliable way. Many new variables have been discovered, among which a large fraction are eclipsing/ellipsoidal binaries unknown prior to launch. A comparison is made between our classification from the Kepler data and the pre-launch class based on data from the ground, showing that the latter needs significant improvement. The noise properties of the Kepler data are compared to those of the exoplanet program of the CoRoT satellite. We find that Kepler improves on CoRoT by a factor 2 to 2.3 in point-to-point scatter., Comment: accepted for publication in ApJL
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- 2010
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43. The asteroseismic potential of Kepler: first results for solar-type stars
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Chaplin, W. J., Appourchaux, T., Elsworth, Y., Garcia, R. A., Houdek, G., Karoff, C., Metcalfe, T. S., Molenda-Zakowicz, J., Monteiro, M. J. P. F. G., Thompson, M. J., Brown, T. M., Christensen-Dalsgaard, J., Gilliland, R. L., Kjeldsen, H., Borucki, W. J., Koch, D., Jenkins, J. M., Ballot, J., Basu, S., Bazot, M., Bedding, T. R., Benomar, O., Bonanno, A., Brandao, I. M., Bruntt, H., Campante, T. L., Creevey, O. L., Di Mauro, M. P., Dogan, G., Dreizler, S., Eggenberger, P., Esch, L., Fletcher, S. T., Frandsen, S., Gai, N., Gaulme, P., Handberg, R., Hekker, S., Howe, R., Huber, D., Korzennik, S. G., Lebrun, J. C., Leccia, S., Martic, M., Mathur, S., Mosser, B., New, R., Quirion, P. -O., Regulo, C., Roxburgh, I. W., Salabert, D., Schou, J., Sousa, S. G., Stello, D., Verner, G. A., Arentoft, T., Barban, C., Belkacem, K., Benatti, S., Biazzo, K., Boumier, P., Bradley, P. A., Broomhall, A. -M., Buzasi, D. L., Claudi, R. U., Cunha, M. S., D'Antona, F., Deheuvels, S., Derekas, A., Hernandez, A. Garcia, Giampapa, M. S., Goupil, M. J., Gruberbauer, M., Guzik, J. A., Hale, S. J., Ireland, M. J., Kiss, L. L., Kitiashvili, I. N., Kolenberg, K., Korhonen, H., Kosovichev, A. G., Kupka, F., Lebreton, Y., Leroy, B., Ludwig, H. -G., Mathis, S., Michel, E., Miglio, A., Montalban, J., Moya, A., Noels, A., Noyes, R. W., Palle, P. L., Piau, L., Preston, H. L., Cortes, T. Roca, Roth, M., Sato, K. H., Schmitt, J., Serenelli, A. M., Aguirre, V. Silva, Stevens, I. R., Suarez, J. C., Suran, M. D., Trampedach, R., Turck-Chieze, S., Uytterhoeven, K., and Ventura, R.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present preliminary asteroseismic results from Kepler on three G-type stars. The observations, made at one-minute cadence during the first 33.5d of science operations, reveal high signal-to-noise solar-like oscillation spectra in all three stars: About 20 modes of oscillation may be clearly distinguished in each star. We discuss the appearance of the oscillation spectra, use the frequencies and frequency separations to provide first results on the radii, masses and ages of the stars, and comment in the light of these results on prospects for inference on other solar-type stars that Kepler will observe., Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures, 1 table; now accepted for publication in ApJ Letters
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- 2010
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44. Selection, Prioritization, and Characteristics of Kepler Target Stars
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Batalha, N. M., Borucki, W. J., Koch, D. G., Bryson, S. T., Haas, M. R., Brown, T. M., Caldwell, D. A., Gilliland, R. L., Latham, D. W., Meibom, S., and Monet, D. G.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The Kepler Mission began its 3.5-year photometric monitoring campaign in May 2009 on a select group of approximately 150,000 stars. The stars were chosen from the ~half million in the field of view that are brighter than 16th magnitude. The selection criteria are quantitative metrics designed to optimize the scientific yield of the mission with regards to the detection of Earth-size planets in the habitable zone. This yields more than 90,000 G-type stars on or close to the Main Sequence, >20,000 of which are brighter than 14th magnitude. At the temperature extremes, the sample includes approximately 3,000 M-type dwarfs and a small sample of O and B-type MS stars <200. Small numbers of giants are included in the sample which contains ~5,000 stars with surface gravities log(g) < 3.5. We present a brief summary of the selection process and the stellar populations it yields in terms of surface gravity, effective temperature, and apparent magnitude. In addition to the primary, statistically-derived target set, several ancillary target lists were manually generated to enhance the science of the mission, examples being: known eclipsing binaries, open cluster members, and high proper-motion stars., Comment: Submitted to Astrophysical Journal Letters
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- 2010
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45. First Kepler results on RR Lyrae stars
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Kolenberg, K., Szabó, R., Kurtz, D. W., Gilliland, R. L., Christensen-Dalsgaard, J., Kjeldsen, H., Brown, T. M., Benkö, J. M., Chadid, M., Derekas, A., Di Criscienzo, M., Guggenberger, E., Kinemuchi, K., Kunder, A., Kolláth, Z., Kopacki, G., Moskalik, P., Nemec, J. M., Nuspl, J., Silvotti, R., Suran, M. D., Borucki, W. J., Koch, D., and Jenkins, J. M.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the first results of our analyses of selected RR Lyrae stars for which data have been obtained by the Kepler Mission. As expected, we find a significant fraction of the RRab stars to show the Blazhko effect, a still unexplained phenomenon that manifests itself as periodic amplitude and phase modulations of the light curve, on time scales of typically tens to hundreds of days. The long time span of the Kepler Mission of 3.5 yrs, and the unprecedentedly high precision of its data provide a unique opportunity for the study of RR Lyrae stars. Using data of a modulated star observed in the first roll as a showcase, we discuss the data, our analyses, findings, and their implications for our understanding of RR Lyrae stars and the Blazhko effect. With at least 40% of the RR Lyrae stars in our sample showing modulation, we confirm the high incidence rate that was only found in recent high-precision studies. Moreover, we report the occurrence of additional frequencies, beyond the main pulsation mode and its modulation components. Their half-integer ratio to the main frequency is reminiscent of a period doubling effect caused by resonances, observed for the first time in RR Lyrae stars., Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ Letters
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- 2010
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46. Discovery of a red giant with solar-like oscillations in an eclipsing binary system from Kepler space-based photometry
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Hekker, S., Debosscher, J., Huber, D., Hidas, M. G., De Ridder, J., Aerts, C., Stello, D., Bedding, T. R., Gilliland, R. L., Christensen-Dalsgaard, J., Brown, T. M., Kjeldsen, H., Borucki, W. J., Koch, D., Jenkins, J. M., Van Winckel, H., Beck, P. G., Blomme, J., Southworth, J., Pigulski, A., Chaplin, W. J., Elsworth, Y. P., Stevens, I. R., Dreizler, S., Kurtz, D. W., Maceroni, C., Cardini, D., Derekas, A., and Suran, M. D.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Oscillating stars in binary systems are among the most interesting stellar laboratories, as these can provide information on the stellar parameters and stellar internal structures. Here we present a red giant with solar-like oscillations in an eclipsing binary observed with the NASA Kepler satellite. We compute stellar parameters of the red giant from spectra and the asteroseismic mass and radius from the oscillations. Although only one eclipse has been observed so far, we can already determine that the secondary is a main-sequence F star in an eccentric orbit with a semi-major axis larger than 0.5 AU and orbital period longer than 75 days., Comment: Letter accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2010
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47. Pre-Spectroscopic False Positive Elimination of Kepler Planet Candidates
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Batalha, N. M., Rowe, J. F., Gilliland, R. L., Jenkins, J. J., Caldwell, D. A., Borucki, W. J., Koch, D. G., Lissauer, J. J., Dunham, E. W., Gautier, T. N., Howell, S. B., Latham, D. W., Marcy, G. W., and Prsa, A.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Ten days of commissioning data (Quarter 0) and thirty-three days of science data (Quarter 1) yield instrumental flux timeseries of ~150,000 stars that were combed for transit events, termed Threshold Crossing Events (TCE), each having a total detection statistic above 7.1-sigma. TCE light curves are modeled as star+planet systems. Those returning a companion radius smaller than 2R_J are assigned a KOI (Kepler Object of Interest) number. The raw flux, pixel flux, and flux-weighted centroids of every KOI are scrutinized to assess the likelihood of being an astrophysical false-positive versus the likelihood of a being a planetary companion. This vetting using Kepler data is referred to as data validation. Herein, we describe the data validation metrics and graphics used to identify viable planet candidates amongst the KOIs. Light curve modeling tests for a) the difference in depth of the odd- versus even-numbered transits, b) evidence of ellipsoidal variations, and c) evidence of a secondary eclipse event at phase=0.5. Flux-weighted centroids are used to test for signals correlated with transit events with a magnitude and direction indicative of a background eclipsing binary. Centroid timeseries are complimented by analysis of images taken in-transit versus out-of-transit, the difference often revealing the pixel contributing the most to the flux change during transit. Examples are shown to illustrate each test. Candidates passing data validation are submitted to ground-based observers for further false-positive elimination or confirmation/characterization., Comment: submitted to Astrophysical Journal Letters
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- 2010
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48. Solar-like oscillations in low-luminosity red giants: first results from Kepler
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Bedding, T. R., Huber, D., Stello, D., Elsworth, Y. P., Hekker, S., Kallinger, T., Mathur, S., Mosser, B., Preston, H. L., Ballot, J., Barban, C., Broomhall, A. M., Buzasi, D. L., Chaplin, W. J., Garcia, R. A., Gruberbauer, M., Hale, S. J., De Ridder, J., Frandsen, S., Borucki, W. J., Brown, T., Christensen-Dalsgaard, J., Gilliland, R. L., Jenkins, J. M., Kjeldsen, H., Koch, D., Belkacem, K., Bildsten, L., Bruntt, H., Campante, T. L., Deheuvels, S., Derekas, A., Dupret, M. -A., Goupil, M. -J., Hatzes, A., Houdek, G., Ireland, M. J., Jiang, C., Karoff, C., Kiss, L. L., Lebreton, Y., Miglio, A., Montalban, J., Noels, A., Roxburgh, I. W., Sangaralingam, V., Stevens, I. R., Suran, M. D., Tarrant, N. J., and Weiss, A.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
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 (Delta nu) and the frequency of maximum power (nu_max). We focus on a sample of 50 low-luminosity stars (nu_max > 100 muHz, 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 delta nu_02 versus Delta nu. The small separation delta nu_01 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., Comment: accepted by ApJ Letters, to appear in special Kepler issue. Updated references
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- 2010
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49. Initial Characteristics of Kepler Short Cadence Data
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Gilliland, Ronald L., Jenkins, J. M., Borucki, W. J., Bryson, S. T., Caldwell, D. A., Clarke, B. D., Dotson, J. L., Haas, M. R., Hall, J., Klaus, T., Koch, D., McCauliff, S., Quintana, E. V., Twicken, J. D., and van Cleve, J. E.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The Kepler Mission offers two options for observations -- either Long Cadence (LC) used for the bulk of core mission science, or Short Cadence (SC) which is used for applications such as asteroseismology of solar-like stars and transit timing measurements of exoplanets where the 1-minute sampling is critical. We discuss the characteristics of SC data obtained in the 33.5-day long Quarter 1 (Q1) observations with Kepler which completed on 15 June 2009. The truly excellent time series precisions are nearly Poisson limited at 11th magnitude providing per-point measurement errors of 200 parts-per-million per minute. For extremely saturated stars near 7th magnitude precisions of 40 ppm are reached, while for background limited measurements at 17th magnitude precisions of 7 mmag are maintained. We note the presence of two additive artifacts, one that generates regularly spaced peaks in frequency, and one that involves additive offsets in the time domain inversely proportional to stellar brightness. The difference between LC and SC sampling is illustrated for transit observations of TrES-2., Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, ApJ Letters in press
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- 2009
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50. Kepler Asteroseismology Program: Introduction and First Results
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Gilliland, Ronald L., Brown, T. M., Christensen-Dalsgaard, J., Kjeldsen, H., Aerts, C., Appourchaux, T., Basu, S., Bedding, T. R., Chaplin, W. J., Cunha, M. S., De Cat, P., De Ridder, J., Guzik, J. A., Handler, G., Kawaler, S., Kiss, L., Kolenberg, K., Kurtz, D. W., Metcalfe, T. S., Monteiro, M. J. P. F. G., Szabó, R., Arentoft, T., Balona, L., Debosscher, J., Elsworth, Y. P., Quirion, P. - O., Stello, D., Suárez, J. C., Borucki, W. J., Jenkins, J. M., Koch, D., Kondo, Y., Latham, D. W., Rowe, J. F., and Steffen, J. H.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Asteroseismology involves probing the interiors of stars and quantifying their global properties, such as radius and age, through observationsof normal modes of oscillation. The technical requirements for conducting asteroseismology include ultra-high precision measured in photometry in parts per million, as well as nearly continuous time series over weeks to years, and cadences rapid enough to sample oscillations with periods as shortas a few minutes. We report on results from the first 43 days of observations in which the unique capabilities of Kepler in providing a revolutionary advance in asteroseismology are already well in evidence. The Kepler asteroseismology program holds intrinsic importance in supporting the core planetary search program through greatly enhanced knowledge of host star properties, and extends well beyond this to rich applications in stellar astrophysics., Comment: 30 pages, 9 figures, PASP in press (Feb 2010)
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- 2009
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