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Browsing by Author "Handberg, Rasmus"

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    A PRECISE ASTEROSEISMIC AGE AND RADIUS FOR THE EVOLVED SUN-LIKE STAR KIC 11026764
    (2010)
    Metcalfe, T. S.
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    Monteiro, Michael J.
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    Thompson, M. J.
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    Molenda-Zakowicz, J.
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    Appourchaux, T.
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    Chaplin, W. J.
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    Dogan, G.
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    Eggenberger, P.
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    Bedding, Timothy R.
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    Bruntt, H.
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    Creevey, O. L.
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    Quirion, P.-O.
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    Stello, Dennis
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    Bonanno, A.
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    Aguirre, Victor Silva
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    Basu, S.
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    Esch, L.
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    Gai, N.
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    di Mauro, M. P.
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    Kosovichev, A. G.
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    Kitiashvili, I. N.
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    Suarez, J. C.
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    Moya, A.
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    Piau, L.
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    Garcia, R. A.
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    Marques, J. P.
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    Frasca, A.
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    Biazzo, K.
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    Sousa, S. G.
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    Dreizler, Stefan  
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    Bazot, M.
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    Karoff, Christoffer
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    Frandsen, S.
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    Wilson, P. A.
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    Brown, T. M.
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    Christensen-Dalsgaard, Joergen
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    Gilliland, Ronald L.
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    Kjeldsen, Hans
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    Campante, Tiago L.
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    Fletcher, S. T.
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    Handberg, Rasmus
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    Regulo, C.
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    Salabert, D.
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    Schou, Jesper  
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    Verner, G. A.
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    Ballot, J.
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    Broomhall, A.-M.
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    Elsworth, Yvonne P.
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    Hekker, Saskia
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    Huber, D.
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    Mathur, S.
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    New, R.
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    Roxburgh, I. W.
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    Sato, K. H.
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    White, Timothy R.
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    Borucki, William J.
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    Koch, Dirk-Jan
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    Jenkins, Jon M.
    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.
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    AN ANCIENT EXTRASOLAR SYSTEM WITH FIVE SUB-EARTH-SIZE PLANETS
    (Iop Publishing Ltd, 2015)
    Campante, Tiago L.
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    Barclay, Thomas
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    Swift, J. J.
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    Huber, D.
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    Adibekyan, V. Zh.
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    Cochran, W.
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    Burke, Christopher J.
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    Isaacson, H.
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    Quintana, E. V.
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    Davies, G. R.
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    Aguirre, Victor Silva
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    Ragozzine, D.
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    Riddle, R.
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    Baranec, C.
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    Basu, S.
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    Chaplin, W. J.
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    Christensen-Dalsgaard, Joergen
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    Metcalfe, T. S.
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    Bedding, Timothy R.
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    Handberg, Rasmus
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    Stello, Dennis
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    Brewer, J. M.
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    Hekker, Saskia
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    Karoff, Christoffer
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    Kolbl, R.
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    Law, N. M.
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    Lundkvist, Mia S.
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    Miglio, Andrea
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    Rowe, Jason F.
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    Santos, Nuno C.
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    van Laerhoven, C.
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    Arentoft, T.
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    Elsworth, Yvonne P.
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    Fischer, Debra A.
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    Kawaler, Steven D.
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    Kjeldsen, Hans
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    Lund, Mikkel N.
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    Marcy, G. W.
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    Sousa, S. G.
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    Sozzetti, A.
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    White, Timothy R.
    The chemical composition of stars hosting small exoplanets (with radii less than four Earth radii) appears to be more diverse than that of gas-giant hosts, which tend to be metal-rich. This implies that small, including Earth-size, planets may have readily formed at earlier epochs in the universe's history when metals were more scarce. We report Kepler spacecraft observations of Kepler-444, a metal-poor Sun-like star from the old population of the Galactic thick disk and the host to a compact system of five transiting planets with sizes between those of Mercury and Venus. We validate this system as a true five-planet system orbiting the target star and provide a detailed characterization of its planetary and orbital parameters based on an analysis of the transit photometry. Kepler-444 is the densest star with detected solar-like oscillations. We use asteroseismology to directly measure a precise age of 11.2 +/- 1.0Gyr for the host star, indicating that Kepler-444 formed when the universe was less than 20% of its current age and making it the oldest known system of terrestrial-size planets. We thus show that Earth-size planets have formed throughout most of the universe's 13.8 billion year history, leaving open the possibility for the existence of ancient life in the Galaxy. The age of Kepler-444 not only suggests that thick-disk stars were among the hosts to the first Galactic planets, but may also help to pinpoint the beginning of the era of planet formation.
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    Asteroseismic inference on the spin-orbit misalignment and stellar parameters of HAT-P-7
    (Edp Sciences S A, 2014)
    Lund, Mikkel N.
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    Lundkvist, Mia S.
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    Aguirre, Victor Silva
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    Houdek, Gunter
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    Casagrande, Luca
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    van Eylen, Vincent
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    Campante, Tiago L.
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    Karoff, Christoffer
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    Kjeldsen, Hans
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    Albrecht, Simon
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    Chaplin, William J.
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    Nielsen, Martin Bo  
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    Degroote, Pieter
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    Davies, Guy R.
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    Handberg, Rasmus
    Context. The measurement of obliquities - the angle between the orbital and stellar rotation -in star-planet systems is of great importance for understanding planet system formation and evolution. The bright and well-studied HAT-P-7 (Kepler-2) system is intriguing because several Rossiter-McLaughlin (RM) measurements found a high projected obliquity in this system, but it was not possible so far to determine whether the orbit is polar and/or retrograde. Aims. The goal of this study is to measure the stellar inclination and hereby the full 3D obliquity of the HAT-P-7 system instead of only the 2D projection as measured by the RM effect. In addition, we provide an updated set of stellar parameters for the star. Methods. We used the full set of available observations from Kepler spanning Q0-Q17 to produce the power spectrum of HAT-P-7. We extracted oscillation-mode frequencies via an Markov chain Monte Carlo peak-bagging routine and used the results from this to estimate the stellar inclination angle. Combining this with the projected obliquity from RM and the inclination of the orbital plane allowed us to determine the stellar obliquity. Furthermore, we used asteroseismology to model the star from the extracted frequencies using two different approaches to the modelling, for which either the stellar evolution codes MESA or GARSTEC were adopted. Results. Our updated asteroseismic modelling shows, i.a., the following stellar parameters for HAT-P-7: M- = 1.51(-0.05)(+0.04) M-circle dot, R- =2.00(-0.02)(+0.01) R-circle dot, and age = 2.07(-0.23)(+0.28) Gyr. The modelling offers a high precision on the stellar parameters, the uncertainty on age, for instance, is of the order similar to 11%. For the stellar inclination we estimate i( ) < 36.5 degrees, which translates into an obliquity of 83 degrees < psi < 111 degrees. The planet HAT-P-7b is likely retrograde in its orbit, and the orbit is close to being polar. The new parameters for the star give an updated planetary density of rho(p) = 0.65 +/- 0.03 g cm(-3), which is lower than previous estimates.
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    Erratum: “Standing on the Shoulders of Dwarfs: The Kepler Asteroseismic LEGACY Sample. I. Oscillation Mode Parameters” (2017, ApJ, 835, 172)
    (2017)
    Lund, Mikkel N.
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    Silva Aguirre, Víctor
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    Davies, Guy R.
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    Chaplin, William J.
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    Christensen-Dalsgaard, Jørgen
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    Houdek, Günter
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    White, Timothy R.
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    Bedding, Timothy R.
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    Ball, Warrick H.  
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    Huber, Daniel
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    Antia, H. M.
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    Lebreton, Yveline
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    Latham, David W.
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    Handberg, Rasmus
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    Verma, Kuldeep
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    Basu, Sarbani
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    Casagrande, Luca
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    Justesen, Anders B.
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    Kjeldsen, Hans
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    Mosumgaard, Jakob R.
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    Hot super-Earths stripped by their host stars
    (Nature Publishing Group, 2016)
    Lundkvist, M. S.
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    Kjeldsen, Hans
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    Albrecht, S.
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    Davies, G. R.
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    Basu, S.
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    Huber, D.
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    Justesen, Anders B.
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    Karoff, Christoffer
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    Aguirre, Victor Silva
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    van Eylen, V.
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    Vang, C.
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    Arentoft, T.
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    Barclay, Thomas
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    Bedding, Timothy R.
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    Campante, Tiago L.
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    Chaplin, W. J.
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    Christensen-Dalsgaard, Joergen
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    Elsworth, Yvonne P.
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    Gilliland, Ronald L.
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    Handberg, Rasmus
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    Hekker, Saskia
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    Kawaler, Steven D.
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    Lund, Mikkel N.
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    Metcalfe, T. S.
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    Miglio, Andrea
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    Rowe, Jason F.
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    Stello, Dennis
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    Tingley, B.
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    White, Timothy R.
    Simulations predict that hot super-Earth sized exoplanets can have their envelopes stripped by photoevaporation, which would present itself as a lack of these exoplanets. However, this absence in the exoplanet population has escaped a firm detection. Here we demonstrate, using asteroseismology on a sample of exoplanets and exoplanet candidates observed during the Kepler mission that, while there is an abundance of super-Earth sized exoplanets with low incident fluxes, none are found with high incident fluxes. We do not find any exoplanets with radii between 2.2 and 3.8 Earth radii with incident flux above 650 times the incident flux on Earth. This gap in the population of exoplanets is explained by evaporation of volatile elements and thus supports the predictions. The confirmation of a hot-super-Earth desert caused by evaporation will add an important constraint on simulations of planetary systems, since they must be able to reproduce the dearth of close-in super-Earths.
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    Kepler observations of the asteroseismic binary HD 176465
    (Edp Sciences S A, 2017)
    White, Timothy R.
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    Benomar, O.
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    Aguirre, Victor Silva
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    Ball, Warrick H.  
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    Bedding, Timothy R.
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    Chaplin, W. J.
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    Christensen-Dalsgaard, Joergen
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    Garcia, R. A.
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    Gizon, Laurent  
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    Stello, Dennis
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    Aigrain, S.
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    Antia, H. M.
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    Appourchaux, T.
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    Bazot, M.
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    Campante, Tiago L.
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    Creevey, O. L.
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    Davies, G. R.
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    Elsworth, Yvonne P.
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    Gaulme, P.
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    Handberg, Rasmus
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    Hekker, Saskia
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    Houdek, Gunter
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    Howe, R.
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    Huber, D.
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    Karoff, Christoffer
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    Marques, J. P.
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    Mathur, S.
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    McQuillan, A.
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    Metcalfe, T. S.
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    Mosser, B.
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    Nielsen, M. B.  
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    Regulo, C.
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    Salabert, D.
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    Stahn, Thorsten  
    Binary star systems are important for understanding stellar structure and evolution, and are especially useful when oscillations can be detected and analysed with asteroseismology. However, only four systems are known in which solar-like oscillations are detected in both components. Here, we analyse the fifth such system, HD 176465, which was observed by Kepler. We carefully analysed the system's power spectrum to measure individual mode frequencies, adapting our methods where necessary to accommodate the fact that both stars oscillate in a similar frequency range. We also modelled the two stars independently by fitting stellar models to the frequencies and complementary parameters. We are able to cleanly separate the oscillation modes in both systems. The stellar models produce compatible ages and initial compositions for the stars, as is expected from their common and contemporaneous origin. Combining the individual ages, the system is about 3.0 +/- 0.5 Gyr old. The two components of HD 176465 are young physically-similar oscillating solar analogues, the first such system to be found, and provide important constraints for stellar evolution and asteroseismology.
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    KEPLER-432: A RED GIANT INTERACTING WITH ONE OF ITS TWO LONG-PERIOD GIANT PLANETS
    (Iop Publishing Ltd, 2015)
    Quinn, Samuel N.
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    White, Timothy R.
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    Latham, David W.
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    Chaplin, William J.
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    Handberg, Rasmus
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    Huber, Daniel
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    Kipping, David M.
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    Payne, Matthew J.
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    Jiang, Chen
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    Aguirre, Victor Silva
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    Stello, Dennis
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    Sliski, David H.
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    Ciardi, David R.
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    Buchhave, Lars A.
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    Bedding, Timothy R.
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    Davies, Guy R.
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    Hekker, Saskia
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    Kjeldsen, Hans
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    Kuszlewicz, James S.
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    Everett, Mark E.
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    Howell, Steve B.
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    Basu, Sarbani
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    Campante, Tiago L.
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    Christensen-Dalsgaard, Jorgen
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    Elsworth, Yvonne P.
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    Karoff, Christoffer
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    Kawaler, Steven D.
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    Lund, Mikkel N.
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    Lundkvist, Mia S.
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    Esquerdo, Gilbert A.
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    Calkins, Michael L.
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    Berlind, Perry
    We report the discovery of Kepler-432b, a giant planet ( M-b = 5.41(-0.18)(+0.32) M-Jup R-b = 1.145(-0.039)(+0.036),R-Jup) transiting an evolved star (M- = 1.32(-0.07)(+0.10) M-circle dot R- 4.06(-0.08)(+0.12) R-circle dot) with an orbital period of Pb = 52.501129(-0.000053)(+0.000067) days. Radial velocities (RVs) reveal that Kepler-432b orbits its parent star with an eccentricity of e = 0.5134(-0.0089)(+0.0098) , which we also measure independently with asterodensity profiling (AP; e = 0.507(-0.114)(+0.039)), thereby confirming the validity of AP on this particular evolved star. The well-determined planetary properties and unusually large mass also make this planet an important benchmark for theoretical models of super-Jupiter formation. Long-term RV monitoring detected the presence of a non-transiting outer planet (Kepler-432c; = M-c sin i(c) = 2.43(-0.24)(+0.22) M-Jup, P-c = 406.2(-2.5)(+3.9) days), and adaptive optics imaging revealed a nearby (0.' 87), faint companion (Kepler-432B) that is a physically bound M dwarf. The host star exhibits high signal-to-noise ratio asteroseismic oscillations, which enable precise measurements of the stellar mass, radius, and age. Analysis of the rotational splitting of the oscillation modes additionally reveals the stellar spin axis to be nearly edge-on, which suggests that the stellar spin is likely well aligned with the orbit of the transiting planet. Despite its long period, the obliquity of the 52.5 day orbit may have been shaped by star-planet interaction in a manner similar to hot Jupiter systems, and we present observational and theoretical evidence to support this scenario. Finally, as a short-period outlier among giant planets orbiting giant stars, study of Kepler-432b may help explain the distribution of massive planets orbiting giant stars interior to 1 AU.
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    Oscillation frequencies for 35 Kepler solar-type planet-hosting stars using Bayesian techniques and machine learning
    (Oxford Univ Press, 2016)
    Davies, G. R.
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    Aguirre, Victor Silva
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    Bedding, Timothy R.
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    Handberg, Rasmus
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    Lund, Mikkel N.
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    Chaplin, W. J.
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    Huber, D.
    ;
    White, Timothy R.
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    Benomar, O.
    ;
    Hekker, Saskia
    ;
    Basu, S.
    ;
    Campante, Tiago L.
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    Christensen-Dalsgaard, Joergen
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    Elsworth, Yvonne P.
    ;
    Karoff, Christoffer
    ;
    Kjeldsen, Hans
    ;
    Lundkvist, M. S.
    ;
    Metcalfe, T. S.
    ;
    Stello, Dennis
    Kepler has revolutionized our understanding of both exoplanets and their host stars. Asteroseismology is a valuable tool in the characterization of stars and Kepler is an excellent observing facility to perform asteroseismology. Here we select a sample of 35 Kepler solar-type stars which host transiting exoplanets (or planet candidates) with detected solar-like oscillations. Using available Kepler short cadence data up to Quarter 16 we create power spectra optimized for asteroseismology of solar-type stars. We identify modes of oscillation and estimate mode frequencies by 'peak bagging' using a Bayesian Markov Chain Monte Carlo framework. In addition, we expand the methodology of quality assurance using a Bayesian unsupervised machine learning approach. We report the measured frequencies of the modes of oscillation for all 35 stars and frequency ratios commonly used in detailed asteroseismic modelling. Due to the high correlations associated with frequency ratios we report the covariance matrix of all frequencies measured and frequency ratios calculated. These frequencies, frequency ratios, and covariance matrices can be used to obtain tight constraint on the fundamental parameters of these planet-hosting stars.
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    Promoting access to and use of seismic data in a large scientific community
    (2017)
    Michel, Eric
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    Belkacem, Kevin
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    Samadi, Reza
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    Assis Peralta, Raphael de
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    Renié, Christian
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    Abed, Mahfoudh
    ;
    Lin, Guangyuan
    ;
    Christensen-Dalsgaard, Jørgen
    ;
    Houdek, Günter
    ;
    Handberg, Rasmus
    ;
    Gizon, Laurent  
    ;
    Burston, Raymond
    ;
    Nagashima, Kaori
    ;
    Pallé, Pere
    ;
    Poretti, Ennio
    ;
    Rainer, Monica
    ;
    Mistò, Angelo
    ;
    Panzera, Maria Rosa
    ;
    Roth, Markus
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    Standing on the Shoulders of Dwarfs: the Kepler Asteroseismic LEGACY Sample. I. Oscillation Mode Parameters
    (Iop Publishing Ltd, 2017)
    Lund, Mikkel N.
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    Aguirre, Victor Silva
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    Davies, Guy R.
    ;
    Chaplin, William J.
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    Christensen-Dalsgaard, Jorgen
    ;
    Houdek, Gunter
    ;
    White, Timothy R.
    ;
    Bedding, Timothy R.
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    Ball, Warrick H.  
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    Huber, Daniel
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    Antia, H. M.
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    Lebreton, Yveline
    ;
    Latham, David W.
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    Handberg, Rasmus
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    Verma, Kuldeep
    ;
    Basu, Sarbani
    ;
    Casagrande, Luca
    ;
    Justesen, Anders B.
    ;
    Kjeldsen, Hans
    ;
    Mosumgaard, Jakob R.
    The advent of space-based missions like Kepler has revolutionized the study of solar-type stars, particularly through the measurement and modeling of their resonant modes of oscillation. Here we analyze a sample of 66 Kepler main-sequence stars showing solar-like oscillations as part of the Kepler seismic LEGACY project. We use Kepler short-cadence data, of which each star has at least 12 months, to create frequency-power spectra optimized for asteroseismology. For each star, we identify its modes of oscillation and extract parameters such as frequency, amplitude, and line width using a Bayesian Markov chain Monte Carlo "peak-bagging" approach. We report the extracted mode parameters for all 66 stars, as well as derived quantities such as frequency difference ratios, the large and small separations Delta v and delta v(02); the behavior of line widths with frequency and line widths at v(max) with T-eff, for which we derive parametrizations; and behavior of mode visibilities. These average properties can be applied in future peak-bagging exercises to better constrain the parameters of the stellar oscillation spectra. The frequencies and frequency ratios can tightly constrain the fundamental parameters of these solar-type stars, and mode line widths and amplitudes can test models of mode damping and excitation.
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    Standing on the Shoulders of Dwarfs: the Kepler Asteroseismic LEGACY Sample. II. Radii, Masses, and Ages
    (Iop Publishing Ltd, 2017)
    Aguirre, Victor Silva
    ;
    Lund, Mikkel N.
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    Antia, H. M.
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    Ball, Warrick H.  
    ;
    Basu, Sarbani
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    Christensen-Dalsgaard, Jorgen
    ;
    Lebreton, Yveline
    ;
    Reese, Daniel R.
    ;
    Verma, Kuldeep
    ;
    Casagrande, Luca
    ;
    Justesen, Anders B.
    ;
    Mosumgaard, Jakob R.
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    Chaplin, William J.
    ;
    Bedding, Timothy R.
    ;
    Davies, Guy R.
    ;
    Handberg, Rasmus
    ;
    Houdek, Gunter
    ;
    Huber, Daniel
    ;
    Kjeldsen, Hans
    ;
    Latham, David W.
    ;
    White, Timothy R.
    ;
    Coelho, Hugo R.
    ;
    Miglio, Andrea
    ;
    Rendle, Ben
    We use asteroseismic data from the Kepler satellite to determine fundamental stellar properties of the 66 main-sequence targets observed for at least one full year by the mission. We distributed tens of individual oscillation frequencies extracted from the time series of each star among seven modeling teams who applied different methods to determine radii, masses, and ages for all stars in the sample. Comparisons among the different results reveal a good level of agreement in all stellar properties, which is remarkable considering the variety of codes, input physics, and analysis methods employed by the different teams. Average uncertainties are of the order of similar to 2% in radius, similar to 4% in mass, and similar to 10% in age, making this the best-characterized sample of main-sequence stars available to date. Our predicted initial abundances and mixing-length parameters are checked against inferences from chemical enrichment laws Delta Y/Delta Zand predictions from 3D atmospheric simulations. We test the accuracy of the determined stellar properties by comparing them to the Sun, angular diameter measurements, Gaia parallaxes, and binary evolution, finding excellent agreement in all cases and further confirming the robustness of asteroseismically determined physical parameters of stars when individual frequencies of oscillation are available. Baptised as the Kepler dwarfs LEGACY sample, these stars are the solar-like oscillators with the best asteroseismic properties available for at least another decade. All data used in this analysis and the resulting stellar parameters are made publicly available for the community.
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    The First APOKASC Catalog of Kepler Dwarf and Subgiant Stars
    (2017)
    Serenelli, Aldo
    ;
    Johnson, Jennifer
    ;
    Huber, Daniel
    ;
    Pinsonneault, Marc
    ;
    Ball, Warrick H.  
    ;
    Tayar, Jamie
    ;
    Aguirre, Victor Silva
    ;
    Basu, Sarbani
    ;
    Troup, Nicholas
    ;
    Hekker, Saskia
    ;
    Kallinger, Thomas
    ;
    Stello, Dennis
    ;
    Davies, Guy R.
    ;
    Lund, Mikkel N.
    ;
    Mathur, Savita
    ;
    Mosser, Benoit
    ;
    Stassun, Keivan G.
    ;
    Chaplin, William J.
    ;
    Elsworth, Yvonne
    ;
    García, Rafael A.
    ;
    Handberg, Rasmus
    ;
    Holtzman, Jon
    ;
    Hearty, Fred
    ;
    García-Hernández, D. A.
    ;
    Gaulme, Patrick
    ;
    Zamora, Olga

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