Solar-like oscillations in low-luminosity red giants: first results from Kepler
T. R. Bedding, D. Huber, D. Stello, Y. P. Elsworth, S. Hekker, T., Kallinger, S. Mathur, B. Mosser, H. L. Preston, J. Ballot, C. Barban, A. M., Broomhall, D. L. Buzasi, W. J. Chaplin, R. A. Garcia, M. Gruberbauer, S. J., Hale, J. De Ridder, S. Frandsen, W. J. Borucki, T. Brown

TL;DR
This study reports the first detection of solar-like oscillations in low-luminosity red giants using Kepler data, revealing detailed seismic properties that can test stellar evolution models.
Contribution
It introduces a new technique for analyzing oscillation modes in red giants and provides the first clear evidence of mixed modes and mode broadening in these stars.
Findings
Confirmed correlation between large separation and frequency of maximum power
Detected mixed modes and l=3 modes in low-luminosity giants
Negative small separation delta nu_01 observed, contrasting with the Sun
Abstract
We have measured solar-like oscillations in red giants using time-series photometry from the first 34 days of science operations of the Kepler Mission. The light curves, obtained with 30-minute sampling, reveal clear oscillations in a large sample of G and K giants, extending in luminosity from the red clump down to the bottom of the giant branch. We confirm a strong correlation between the large separation of the oscillations (Delta nu) and the frequency of maximum power (nu_max). We focus on a sample of 50 low-luminosity stars (nu_max > 100 muHz, L <~ 30 L_sun) having high signal-to-noise ratios and showing the unambiguous signature of solar-like oscillations. These are H-shell-burning stars, whose oscillations should be valuable for testing models of stellar evolution and for constraining the star-formation rate in the local disk. We use a new technique to compare stars on a single…
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