Ground-based follow-up in relation to Kepler Asteroseismic Investigation
K. Uytterhoeven, M. Briquet, H. Bruntt, P. De Cat, S. Frandsen, J., Gutierrez-Soto, L. Kiss, D.W. Kurtz, M. Marconi, J. Molenda-Zakowicz, R., Ostensen, S. Randall, J. Southworth, R. Szabo, and KASC Working Groups on, ground-based observations

TL;DR
This paper discusses the importance of ground-based follow-up observations, including photometry and spectroscopy, to complement Kepler space data for asteroseismic studies of pulsating stars.
Contribution
It presents the coordination of ground-based observational activities to enhance the characterization of Kepler asteroseismic targets across multiple telescopes and observatories.
Findings
Ground-based data are essential for determining physical parameters of pulsating stars.
Multi-site observations improve mode parameter characterization.
Complementary data enhance asteroseismic modeling accuracy.
Abstract
The Kepler space mission, successfully launched in March 2009, is providing continuous, high-precision photometry of thousands of stars simultaneously. The uninterrupted time-series of stars of all known pulsation types are a precious source for asteroseismic studies. The Kepler data do not provide information on the physical parameters, such as effective temperature, surface gravity, metallicity, and vsini, which are crucial for successful asteroseismic modelling. Additional ground-based time-series data are needed to characterize mode parameters in several types of pulsating stars. Therefore, ground-based multi-colour photometry and mid/high-resolution spectroscopy are needed to complement the space data. We present ground-based activities within KASC on selected asteroseismic Kepler targets of several pulsation types. (Based on observations made with the Isaac Newton Telescope,…
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