Determining global parameters of the oscillations of solar-like stars
S. Mathur, R.A. Garcia, C. Regulo, O.L. Creevey, J. Ballot, D., Salabert, T. Arentoft, P.-O. Quirion, W.J. Chaplin, and H. Kjeldsen

TL;DR
This paper presents an automatic pipeline to estimate global oscillation parameters of solar-like stars using space-based data, improving stellar modeling and understanding of stellar structure and evolution.
Contribution
The authors developed a robust, automated method combining data analysis and modeling techniques to determine key stellar parameters from oscillation data.
Findings
Pipeline accurately retrieves stellar parameters from simulated data.
Results are consistent with known data for the Sun and CoRoT targets.
Method achieves high reliability for stars with magnitude below 11.
Abstract
Helioseismology has enabled us to better understand the solar interior, while also allowing us to better constrain solar models. But now is a tremendous epoch for asteroseismology as space missions dedicated to studying stellar oscillations have been launched within the last years (MOST and CoRoT). CoRoT has already proved valuable results for many types of stars, while Kepler, which was launched in March 2009, will provide us with a huge number of seismic data very soon. This is an opportunity to better constrain stellar models and to finally understand stellar structure and evolution. The goal of this research work is to estimate the global parameters of any solar-like oscillating target in an automatic manner. We want to determine the global parameters of the acoustic modes (large separation, range of excited pressure modes, maximum amplitude, and its corresponding frequency),…
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