1. Detection of solar-like oscillations in the bright red giant stars $\gamma$ Psc and $\theta^1$ Tau from a 190-day high-precision spectroscopic multisite campaign
- Author
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Beck, P. G., Kambe, E., Hillen, M., Corsaro, E., Van Winckel, H., Moravveji, E., De Ridder, J., Bloemen, S., Saesen, S., Mathias, P., Degroote, P., Kallinger, T., Verhoelst, T., Ando, H., Carrier, F., Acke, B., Oreiro, R., Miglio, A., Eggenberger, P., Sato, B., Zwintz, K., Pápics, P. I., Marcos-Arenal, P., Fuentes, S. A. Sans, Schmid, V. S., Waelkens, C., Østensen, R., Matthews, J. M., Yoshida, M., Izumiura, H., Koyano, H., Nagayama, S., Shimizu, Y., Okada, N., Okita, K., Sakamoto, A., Yamamuro, T., and Aerts, C.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Red giants are evolved stars which exhibit solar-like oscillations. Although a multitude of stars have been observed with space telescopes, only a handful of red-giant stars were targets of spectroscopic asteroseismic observing projects. We search for solar-like oscillations in the two bright red-giant stars $\gamma$ Psc and $\theta^1$ Tau from time series of ground-based spectroscopy and determine the frequency of the excess of oscillation power $\nu_{max}$ and the mean large frequency separation $\Delta\nu$ for both stars. The radial velocities of $\gamma$ Psc and $\theta^1$ Tau were monitored for 120 and 190 days, respectively. Nearly 9000 spectra were obtained. To reach the accurate radial velocities, we used simultaneous thorium-argon and iodine-cell calibration of our optical spectra. In addition to the spectroscopy, we acquired VLTI observations of $\gamma$ Psc for an independent estimate of the radius. Also 22 days of observations of $\theta^1$ Tau with the MOST-satellite were analysed. The frequency analysis of the radial velocity data of $\gamma$ Psc revealed an excess of oscillation power around 32 $\mu$Hz and a large frequency separation of 4.1$\pm$0.1$\mu$Hz. $\theta^1$ Tau exhibits oscillation power around 90 $\mu$Hz, with a large frequency separation of 6.9$\pm$0.2$\mu$Hz. Scaling relations indicate that $\gamma$ Psc is a star of about $\sim$1 M$_\odot$ and $\sim$10 R$_\odot$. $\theta^1$ Tau appears to be a massive star of about $\sim$2.7 M$_\odot$ and $\sim$11 R$_\odot$. The radial velocities of both stars were found to be modulated on time scales much longer than the oscillation periods. While the mass of $\theta^1$ Tau is in agreement with results from dynamical parallaxes, we find a lower mass for $\gamma$ Psc than what is given in the literature. The long periodic variability agrees with the expected time scales of rotational modulation., Comment: 15 pages, 15 figures; accepted for publication in A&A
- Published
- 2014
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