4.6 Article

A homogeneous spectroscopic analysis of a Kepler legacy sample of dwarfs for gravity-mode asteroseismology

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 650, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/202140466

Keywords

asteroseismology; stars: variables: general; stars: oscillations; stars: fundamental parameters; stars: abundances; techniques: spectroscopic

Funding

  1. Research Foundation - Flanders (FWO), Belgium
  2. Research Council of KU Leuven, Belgium
  3. Fonds National de la Recherche Scientifique (F.R.S.-FNRS), Belgium
  4. Royal Observatory of Belgium
  5. Observatoire de Geneve, Switzerland
  6. Thuringer Landessternwarte Tautenburg, Germany
  7. Research Foundation Flanders (FWO) [G0H5416N, 11E5620N, 12ZB620N, 1286521N, G0F8H6N]
  8. Flemish Government
  9. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme [670519: MAMSIE]
  10. KU Leuven Research Council [C16/18/005: PARADISE]
  11. National Science Foundation [NSF PHY-1 748 958]
  12. FWO Odysseus program [G0F8H6N]

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The study aims to create an optimal sample for joint asteroseismic and spectroscopic stellar modeling using high-resolution spectroscopy, and to provide additional observational input for modeling the envelope layers of non-radially pulsating dwarfs. The results suggest overestimation of metallicity for F-type dwarfs in the literature, and a hint of deep mixing in B-type stars based on C and O abundance ratios.
Context. Asteroseismic modelling of the internal structure of main-sequence stars born with a convective core has so far been based on homogeneous analyses of space photometric Kepler light curves of four years in duration, to which most often incomplete inhomogeneously-deduced spectroscopic information was added to break degeneracies.Aims. Our goal is twofold: (1) to compose an optimal sample of gravity-mode pulsators observed by the Kepler space telescope for joint asteroseismic and spectroscopic stellar modelling, and (2) to provide spectroscopic parameters for its members, deduced in a homogeneous way.Methods. We assembled HERMES high-resolution optical spectroscopy at the 1.2 m Mercator telescope for 111 dwarfs, whose Kepler light curves allowed for the determination of their near-core rotation rates. Our spectroscopic information offers additional observational input to also model the envelope layers of these non-radially pulsating dwarfs.Results. We determined stellar parameters and surface abundances from atmospheric analysis with spectrum normalisation based on a new machine-learning tool. Our results suggest a systematic overestimation of metallicity ([M/H]) in the literature for the studied F-type dwarfs, presumably due to normalisation limitations caused by the dense line spectrum of these rotating stars. CNO surface abundances were found to be uncorrelated with the rotation properties of the F-type stars. For the B-type stars, we find a hint of deep mixing from C and O abundance ratios; N abundance uncertainties are too great to reveal a correlation of N with the rotation of the stars.Conclusions. Our spectroscopic stellar parameters and abundance determinations allow for the future joint spectroscopic, astrometric (Gaia), and asteroseismic modelling of this legacy sample of gravity-mode pulsators, with the aim of improving our understanding of transport processes in the core-hydrogen burning phase of stellar evolution.

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