4.7 Article

Spectrum analysis of bright Kepler late B- to early F-stars

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 431, Issue 4, Pages 3685-3696

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stt453

Keywords

stars: abundances; stars: fundamental parameters; stars: variables: delta Scuti

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Economy Competitiveness (MINECO) [AYA2010-17803]
  2. National Aeronautics and Space Administration
  3. National Science Foundation

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The Kepler satellite mission was designed to search for transiting exoplanets and delivers single band-pass light curves of a huge number of stars observed in the Cygnus-Lyra region. At the same time, it opens a new window for asteroseismology. In order to accomplish one of the required preconditions for the asteroseismic modelling of the stars, namely knowledge of their precise fundamental parameters, ground-based spectroscopic and/or photometric follow-up observations are needed. We aim to derive fundamental parameters and individual abundances for a sample of 18 gamma Dor/delta Sct and 8 slowly pulsating B (SPB)/beta Cep candidate stars in the Kepler satellite field of view. We use the spectral synthesis method to model newly obtained, high-resolution spectra of 26 stars in order to derive their fundamental parameters like T-eff, log g, nu sin i, xi, [M/H] and individual abundances with high accuracy. The stars are then placed into the log(T-eff)-log(g) diagram and the obtained spectroscopic classification is compared to the existing photometric one. For most A-and F-type stars, the derived T-eff values agree within the measurement errors with the values given in the Kepler Input Catalog (KIC). For hot stars, the KIC temperatures appear to be systematically underestimated, in agreement with previous findings. We also find that the temperatures derived from our spectra agree reasonably well with those derived from the spectral energy distribution fitting. According to their position in the log(T-eff)-log(g) diagram, two stars are expected gamma Dor stars, four stars are expected delta Sct stars and four stars are possibly delta Sct stars at the blue edge of the instability strip. Two stars are confirmed SPB variables, and one star falls into the SPB instability region but its parameters might be biased by binarity. Two of the four stars that fall into the delta Sct instability region show gamma Dor-type oscillation in their light curves implying that gamma Dor-like oscillations are much more common among the delta Sct stars than what is theoretically expected. Moreover, one of the stars located at the hot border of the delta Sct instability strip is classified as delta Sct-gamma Dor hybrid pulsator from its light-curve analysis. Given that these findings are fully consistent with recent investigations, we conclude that a revision of the gamma Dor and delta Sct instability strips is essential.

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