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What CoRoT tells us about {\delta} Scuti stars existence of a regular pattern and seismic indices to characterize stars

Inspired by the so appealing example of red giants, where going from a handful of stars to thousands revealed the structure of the eigenspectrum, we inspected a large homogeneous set of around 1860 {\delta} Scuti stars observed with CoRoT. This unique data set reveals a common regular pattern which...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:arXiv.org 2017-05
Main Authors: Michel, Eric, Marc-Antoine Dupret, Reese, Daniel, Rhita-Maria Ouazzani, Debosscher, Jonas, Antonio García Hernández, Belkacem, Kevin, Samadi, Reza, Salmon, Sébastien, Suarez, Juan Carlos, Sebastia Barceló Forteza
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Language:English
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Summary:Inspired by the so appealing example of red giants, where going from a handful of stars to thousands revealed the structure of the eigenspectrum, we inspected a large homogeneous set of around 1860 {\delta} Scuti stars observed with CoRoT. This unique data set reveals a common regular pattern which appears to be in agreement with island modes featured by theoretical non-perturbative treatments of fast rotation. The comparison of these data with models and linear stability calculations suggests that spectra can be fruitfully characterized to first order by a few parameters which might play the role of seismic indices for {\delta} Scuti stars, as {\Delta \nu} and {\nu_{max}} do for red giants. The existence of this pattern offers an observational support for guiding further theoretical works on fast rotation. It also provides a framework for further investigation of the observational material collected by CoRoT and Kepler. Finally, it sketches out the perspective of using {\delta} Scuti stars pulsations for ensemble asteroseismology.
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.1705.03721