pith. sign in

Photometric Variability in Kepler Target Stars: The Sun Among Stars -- A First Look

1 Pith paper cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.

1 Pith paper citing it
abstract

The Kepler mission provides an exciting opportunity to study the lightcurves of stars with unprecedented precision and continuity of coverage. This is the first look at a large sample of stars with photometric data of a quality that has heretofore been only available for our Sun. It provides the first opportunity to compare the irradiance variations of our Sun to a large cohort of stars ranging from vary similar to rather different stellar properties, at a wide variety of ages. Although Kepler data is in an early phase of maturity, and we only analyze the first month of coverage, it is sufficient to garner the first meaningful measurements of our Sun's variability in the context of a large cohort of main sequence stars in the solar neighborhood. We find that nearly half of the full sample is more active than the active Sun, although most of them are not more than twice as active. The active fraction is closer to a third for the stars most similar to the Sun, and rises to well more than half for stars cooler than mid K spectral types.

citation-role summary

method 1

citation-polarity summary

fields

astro-ph.SR 1

years

2019 1

verdicts

UNVERDICTED 1

roles

method 1

polarities

use method 1

representative citing papers

Asteroseismology of solar-type stars

astro-ph.SR · 2019-06-27 · unverdicted · novelty 2.0

This review summarizes the development, techniques, and open questions in asteroseismology of solar-type stars whose oscillations are stochastically excited by surface convection.

citing papers explorer

Showing 1 of 1 citing paper.

  • Asteroseismology of solar-type stars astro-ph.SR · 2019-06-27 · unverdicted · none · ref 34 · internal anchor

    This review summarizes the development, techniques, and open questions in asteroseismology of solar-type stars whose oscillations are stochastically excited by surface convection.