Characterizing Kepler Asteroseismic Targets
Joanna Molenda-Zakowicz, David W. Latham, Giovanni Catanzaro, Antonio, Frasca, and Samuel N. Quinn

TL;DR
This study provides detailed spectroscopic characterization of 44 Kepler asteroseismic targets, revealing binary systems, stellar parameters, and emphasizing the need to refine Kepler Input Catalog data for better asteroseismic modeling.
Contribution
The paper offers high-resolution spectroscopic data and analysis for Kepler targets, including binary detection and stellar parameter determination, which enhances the accuracy of asteroseismic models.
Findings
Discovered three double-lined spectroscopic binaries.
Derived stellar parameters for all targets, including effective temperature and metallicity.
Confirmed the Am spectral type of HIP 94472 and its slow rotation.
Abstract
Stellar structure and evolution can be studied in great detail by asteroseismic methods, provided data of high precision are available. We determine the effective temperature (Teff), surface gravity (log g), metallicity, and the projected rotational velocity (v sin i) of 44 Kepler asteroseismic targets using our high-resolution (R > 20,000) spectroscopic observations; these parameters will then be used to compute asteroseismic models of these stars and to interpret the Kepler light curves.We use the method of cross correlation to measure the radial velocity (RV) of our targets, while atmospheric parameters are derived using the ROTFIT code and spectral synthesis method. We discover three double-lined spectroscopic binaries, HIP 94924, HIP 95115, and HIP 97321 - for the last system, we provide the orbital solution, and we report two suspected single-lined spectroscopic binaries, HIP94112…
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