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Browsing by Author "Ceillier, T."

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    Rotation and magnetism of Kepler pulsating solar-like stars Towards asteroseismically calibrated age-rotation relations
    (Edp Sciences S A, 2014)
    Garcia, R. A.
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    Ceillier, T.
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    Salabert, D.
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    Mathur, S.
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    van Saders, J. L.
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    Pinsonneault, M.
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    Ballot, J.
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    Beck, P. G.
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    Bloemen, S.
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    Campante, Tiago L.
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    Davies, G. R.
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    do Nascimento, J.-D., Jr.
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    Mathis, S.
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    Metcalfe, T. S.
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    Nielsen, M. B.  
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    Suarez, J. C.
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    Chaplin, W. J.
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    Jimenez, Alfredo
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    Karoff, Christoffer
    Kepler ultra-high precision photometry of long and continuous observations provides a unique dataset in which surface rotation and variability can be studied for thousands of stars. Because many of these old field stars also have independently measured asteroseismic ages, measurements of rotation and activity are particularly interesting in the context of age-rotation-activity relations. In particular, age-rotation relations generally lack good calibrators at old ages, a problem that this Kepler sample of old-field stars is uniquely suited to address. We study the surface rotation and photometric magnetic activity of a subset of 540 solar-like stars on the main-sequence and the subgiant branch for which stellar pulsations have been measured. The rotation period was determined by comparing the results from two different analysis methods: i) the projection onto the frequency domain of the time-period analysis, and ii) the autocorrelation function of the light curves. Reliable surface rotation rates were then extracted by comparing the results from two different sets of calibrated data and from the two complementary analyses. General photometric levels of magnetic activity in this sample of stars were also extracted by using a photometric activity index, which takes into account the rotation period of the stars. We report rotation periods for 310 out of 540 targets (excluding known binaries and candidate planet-host stars); our measurements span a range of 1 to 100 days. The photometric magnetic activity levels of these stars were computed, and for 61.5% of the dwarfs, this level is similar to the range, from minimum to maximum, of the solar magnetic activity. We demonstrate that hot dwarfs, cool dwarfs, and subgiants have very different rotation-age relationships, highlighting the importance of separating out distinct populations when interpreting stellar rotation periods. Our sample of cool dwarf stars with age and metallicity data of the highest quality is consistent with gyrochronology relations reported in the literature.
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    Seismic constraints on the radial dependence of the internal rotation profiles of sixKeplersubgiants and young red giants
    (2014)
    Deheuvels, S.
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    Doğan, G.
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    Goupil, M. J.
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    Appourchaux, Thierry
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    Benomar, O.
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    Bruntt, H.
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    Campante, T. L.
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    Casagrande, L.
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    Ceillier, T.
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    Davies, G. R.
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    Cat, P. de
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    Fu, J. N.
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    García, R. A.
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    Lobel, A.
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    Mosser, B.
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    Reese, D. R.
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    Regulo, C.
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    Schou, J.  
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    Stahn, Thorsten  
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    Thygesen, A. O.
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    Yang, X. H.
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    Chaplin, W. J.
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    Christensen-Dalsgaard, J.
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    Eggenberger, P.
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    Gizon, Laurent  
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    Mathur, Saurabh
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    Molenda-Żakowicz, J.
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    Pinsonneault, M.
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    Testing the recovery of stellar rotation signals from Kepler light curves using a blind hare-and-hounds exercise
    (Oxford Univ Press, 2015)
    Aigrain, S.
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    Llama, J.
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    Ceillier, T.
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    das Chagas, M. L.
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    Davenport, J. R. A.
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    Garcia, R. A.
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    Hay, K. L.
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    Lanza, A. F.
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    McQuillan, A.
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    Mazeh, T.
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    de Medeiros, J. R.
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    Nielsen, M. B.  
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    Reinhold, T.  
    We present the results of a blind exercise to test the recoverability of stellar rotation and differential rotation in Kepler light curves. The simulated light curves lasted 1000 d and included activity cycles, Sun-like butterfly patterns, differential rotation and spot evolution. The range of rotation periods, activity levels and spot lifetime were chosen to be representative of the Kepler data of solar-like stars. Of the 1000 simulated light curves, 770 were injected into actual quiescent Kepler light curves to simulate Kepler noise. The test also included five 1000-d segments of the Sun's total irradiance variations at different points in the Sun's activity cycle. Five teams took part in the blind exercise, plus two teams who participated after the content of the light curves had been released. The methods used included Lomb-Scargle periodograms and variants thereof, autocorrelation function and wavelet-based analyses, plus spot modelling to search for differential rotation. The results show that the 'overall' period is well recovered for stars exhibiting low and moderate activity levels. Most teams reported values within 10 per cent of the true value in 70 per cent of the cases. There was, however, little correlation between the reported and simulated values of the differential rotation shear, suggesting that differential rotation studies based on full-disc light curves alone need to be treated with caution, at least for solar-type stars. The simulated light curves and associated parameters are available online for the community to test their own methods.

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