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Browsing by Author "Mullally, F."

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    PLANETARY CANDIDATES OBSERVED BY KEPLER. V. PLANET SAMPLE FROM Q1-Q12 (36 MONTHS)
    (Iop Publishing Ltd, 2015)
    Rowe, Jason F.
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    Coughlin, Jeffrey L.
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    Antoci, Victoria
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    Barclay, Thomas
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    Batalha, Natalie M.
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    Borucki, William J.
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    Burke, Christopher J.
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    Bryson, Steven T.
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    Caldwell, Douglas A.
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    Campbell, Jennifer R.
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    Catanzarite, Joseph H.
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    Christiansen, Jessie L.
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    Cochran, William D.
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    Gilliland, Ronald L.
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    Girouard, Forrest R.
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    Haas, Michael R.
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    Helminiak, Krzysztof G.
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    Henze, Christopher E.
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    Hoffman, Kelsey L.
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    Howell, Steve B.
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    Huber, Daniel
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    Hunter, Roger C.
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    Jang-Condell, Hannah
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    Jenkins, Jon M.
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    Klaus, Todd C.
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    Latham, David W.
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    Li, Jie  
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    Lissauer, Jack J.
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    McCauliff, Sean D.
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    Morris, Robert L.
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    Mullally, F.
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    Ofir, Aviv
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    Quarles, Billy
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    Quintana, Elisa V.
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    Sabale, Anima
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    Seader, Shawn
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    Shporer, Avi
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    Smith, Jeffrey C.
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    Steffen, Jason H.
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    Still, Martin
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    Tenenbaum, Peter
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    Thompson, Susan E.
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    Twicken, Joseph D.
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    van Laerhoven, Christa
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    Wolfgang, Angie
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    Zamudio, Khadeejah A.
    The Kepler mission discovered 2842 exoplanet candidates with 2 yr of data. We provide updates to the Kepler planet candidate sample based upon 3 yr (Q1-Q12) of data. Through a series of tests to exclude false-positives, primarily caused by eclipsing binary stars and instrumental systematics, 855 additional planetary candidates have been discovered, bringing the total number known to 3697. We provide revised transit parameters and accompanying posterior distributions based on a Markov Chain Monte Carlo algorithm for the cumulative catalog of Kepler Objects of Interest. There are now 130 candidates in the cumulative catalog that receive less than twice the flux the Earth receives and more than 1100 have a radius less than 1.5 R-circle plus. There are now a dozen candidates meeting both criteria, roughly doubling the number of candidate Earth analogs. A majority of planetary candidates have a high probability of being bonafide planets, however, there are populations of likely false-positives. We discuss and suggest additional cuts that can be easily applied to the catalog to produce a set of planetary candidates with good fidelity. The full catalog is publicly available at the NASA Exoplanet Archive.
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    PLANETARY CANDIDATES OBSERVED BY KEPLER. VI. PLANET SAMPLE FROM Q1-Q16 (47 MONTHS)
    (Iop Publishing Ltd, 2015)
    Mullally, F.
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    Coughlin, Jeffrey L.
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    Thompson, Susan E.
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    Rowe, Jason F.
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    Burke, Christopher J.
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    Latham, David W.
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    Batalha, Natalie M.
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    Bryson, Steven T.
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    Christiansen, Jessie L.
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    Henze, Christopher E.
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    Ofir, Aviv
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    Quarles, Billy
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    Shporer, Avi
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    van Eylen, Vincent
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    van Laerhoven, Christa
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    Shah, Yash
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    Wolfgang, Angie
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    Chaplin, W. J.
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    Xie, Ji-Wei
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    Akeson, Rachel
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    Argabright, Vic
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    Bachtell, Eric
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    Barclay, Thomas
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    Borucki, William J.
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    Caldwell, Douglas A.
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    Campbell, Jennifer R.
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    Catanzarite, Joseph H.
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    Cochran, William D.
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    Duren, Riley M.
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    Fleming, Scott W.
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    Fraquelli, Dorothy
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    Girouard, Forrest R.
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    Haas, Michael R.
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    Helminiak, Krzysztof G.
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    Howell, Steve B.
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    Huber, Daniel
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    Larson, Kipp
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    Gautier, Thomas N.
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    Jenkins, Jon M.
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    Li, Jie  
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    Lissauer, Jack J.
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    McArthur, Scot
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    Miller, Chris
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    Morris, Robert L.
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    Patil-Sabale, Anima
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    Plavchan, Peter
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    Putnam, Dustin
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    Quintana, Elisa V.
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    Ramirez, Solange
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    Aguirre, Victor Silva
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    Seader, Shawn
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    Smith, Jeffrey C.
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    Steffen, Jason H.
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    Stewart, Chris
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    Stober, Jeremy
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    Still, Martin
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    Tenenbaum, Peter
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    Troeltzsch, John
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    Twicken, Joseph D.
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    Zamudio, Khadeejah A.
    We present the sixth catalog of Kepler candidate planets based on nearly four years of high precision photometry. This catalog builds on the legacy of previous catalogs released by the Kepler project and includes 1493 new Kepler Objects of Interest (KOIs) of which 554 are planet candidates, and 131 of these candidates have best-fit radii < 1.5 R-circle plus. This brings the total number of KOIs and planet candidates to 7348 and 4175 respectively. We suspect that many of these new candidates at the low signal-to-noise ratio limit may be false alarms created by instrumental noise, and discuss our efforts to identify such objects. We re-evaluate all previously published KOIs with orbital periods of >50 days to provide a consistently vetted sample that can be used to improve planet occurrence rate calculations. We discuss the performance of our planet detection algorithms, and the consistency of our vetting products. The full catalog is publicly available at the NASA Exoplanet Archive.
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    Seismic Evidence for a Rapidly Rotating Core in a Lower-Giant-Branch Star Observed with Kepler
    (2012)
    Deheuvels, S.
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    Garcia, R. A.
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    Chaplin, W. J.
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    Basu, S.
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    Antia, H. M.
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    Appourchaux, T.
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    Benomar, O.
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    Davies, G. R.
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    Elsworth, Yvonne P.
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    Gizon, Laurent  
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    Goupil, M. J.
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    Reese, Daniel R.
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    Regulo, C.
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    Schou, Jesper  
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    Stahn, Thorsten  
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    Casagrande, Luca
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    Christensen-Dalsgaard, Joergen
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    Fischer, D.
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    Hekker, Saskia
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    Kjeldsen, Hans
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    Mathur, S.
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    Mosser, B.
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    Pinsonneault, M.
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    Valenti, Jeff A.
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    Christiansen, Jessie L.
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    Kinemuchi, K.
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    Mullally, F.
    Rotation is expected to have an important influence on the structure and the evolution of stars. However, the mechanisms of angular momentum transport in stars remain theoretically uncertain and very complex to take into account in stellar models. To achieve a better understanding of these processes, we desperately need observational constraints on the internal rotation of stars, which until very recently was restricted to the Sun. In this paper, we report the detection of mixed modes-i.e., modes that behave both as g modes in the core and as p modes in the envelope-in the spectrum of the early red giant KIC 7341231, which was observed during one year with the Kepler spacecraft. By performing an analysis of the oscillation spectrum of the star, we show that its non-radial modes are clearly split by stellar rotation and we are able to determine precisely the rotational splittings of 18 modes. We then find a stellar model that reproduces very well the observed atmospheric and seismic properties of the star. We use this model to perform inversions of the internal rotation profile of the star, which enables us to show that the core of the star is rotating at least five times faster than the envelope. This will shed new light on the processes of transport of angular momentum in stars. In particular, this result can be used to place constraints on the angular momentum coupling between the core and the envelope of early red giants, which could help us discriminate between the theories that have been proposed over the last few decades.
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    The pulsation modes of the pre-white dwarf PG 1159-035
    (2008)
    Costa, J. E. S.
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    Kepler, S. O.
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    Winget, D. E.
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    O’Brien, M. S.
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    Kawaler, S. D.
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    Costa, A. F. M.
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    Giovannini, O.
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    Kanaan, A.
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    Mukadam, A. S.
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    Mullally, F.
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    Nitta, A.
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    Provençal, J. L.
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    Shipman, H.
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    Wood, M. A.
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    Ahrens, T. J.
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    Grauer, A.
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    Kilic, M.
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    Bradley, P. A.
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    Sekiguchi, K.
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    Crowe, R.
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    Jiang, X. J.
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    Sullivan, D.
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    Sullivan, T.
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    Rosen, R.
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    Clemens, J. C.
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    Janulis, R.
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    O’Donoghue, D.
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    Ogloza, W.
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    Baran, A.
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    Silvotti, R.
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    Marinoni, S.
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    Vauclair, G.
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    Dolez, N.
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    Chevreton, M.
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    Dreizler, S.  
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    Schuh, S.  
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    Deetjen, J.
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    Nagel, T.
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    Solheim, J.-E.
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    Gonzalez Perez, J. M.
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    Ulla, A.
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    Barstow, M.
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    Burleigh, M.
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    Good, S.
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    Metcalfe, T. S.
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    Kim, S.-L.
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    Lee, H.
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    Sergeev, A.
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    Akan, M. C.
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    Çakırlı, Ö.
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    Paparo, M.
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    Viraghalmy, G.
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    Ashoka, B. N.
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    Handler, G.
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    Hürkal, Ö.
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    Johannessen, F.
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    Kleinman, S. J.
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    Kalytis, R.
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    Krzesinski, J.
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    Klumpe, E.
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    Larrison, J.
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    Lawrence, T.
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    Meištas, E.
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    Martinez, P.  
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    Nather, R. E.
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    Fu, J.-N.
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    Pakštienė, E.
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    Romero-Colmenero, E.
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    Riddle, R.
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    Seetha, S.
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    Silvestri, N. M.
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    Vučković, M.
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    Warner, B.
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    Zola, S.
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    Althaus, L. G.
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    Córsico, A. H.
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    Montgomery, M. H.
    Context. PG 1159-035, a pre-white dwarf with Teff 140 000 K, is the prototype of both two classes: the PG 1159 spectroscopic class and the DOV pulsating class. Previous studies of PG 1159-035 photometric data obtained with the Whole Earth Telescope (WET) showed a rich frequency spectrum allowing the identification of 122 pulsation modes. Analyzing the periods of pulsation, it is possible to measure the stellar mass, the rotational period and the inclination of the rotation axis, to estimate an upper limit for the magnetic field, and even to obtain information about the inner stratification of the star. Aims. We have three principal aims: to increase the number of detected and identified pulsation modes in PG 1159-035, study trapping of the star’s pulsation modes, and to improve or constrain the determination of stellar parameters. Methods. We used all available WET photometric data from 1983, 1985, 1989, 1993 and 2002 to identify the pulsation periods. Results. We identified 76 additional pulsation modes, increasing to 198 the number of known pulsation modes in PG 1159-035, the largest number of modes detected in any star besides the Sun. From the period spacing we estimated a mass M/M = 0.59 ± 0.02 for PG 1159-035, with the uncertainty dominated by the models, not the observation. Deviations in the regular period spacing suggest that some of the pulsation modes are trapped, even though the star is a pre-white dwarf and the gravitational settling is ongoing. The position of the transition zone that causes the mode trapping was calculated at rc/R = 0.83 ± 0.05. From the multiplet splitting, we calculated the rotational period Prot = 1.3920 ± 0.0008 days and an upper limit for the magnetic field, B < 2000 G. The total power of the pulsation modes at the stellar surface changed less than 30% for = 1 modes and less than 50% for = 2 modes. We find no evidence of linear combinations between the 198 pulsation mode frequencies. PG 1159-035 models have not significative convection zones, supporting the hypothesis that nonlinearity arises in the convection zones in cooler pulsating white dwarf stars.

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