Visibilities and bolometric corrections for stellar oscillation modes observed by Kepler
J. Ballot, C. Barban, C. van 't Veer-Menneret

TL;DR
This paper provides a simple bolometric correction formula and mode visibility estimates for stellar oscillation modes observed by Kepler, aiding the comparison of observed amplitudes with theoretical models.
Contribution
It introduces a new, easy-to-use bolometric correction law and tabulated mode visibilities based on limb-darkening models for Kepler data analysis.
Findings
Derived a quadratic law for bolometric correction as a function of effective temperature.
Provided tabulated mode visibilities for a range of stellar parameters.
Showed limb-darkening based visibilities are accurate and computationally efficient.
Abstract
Kepler produces a large amount of data used for asteroseismological analyses, particularly of solar-like stars and red giants. The mode amplitudes observed in the Kepler spectral band have to be converted into bolometric amplitudes to be compared to models. We give a simple bolometric correction for the amplitudes of radial modes observed with Kepler, as well as the relative visibilities of non-radial modes. We numerically compute the bolometric correction c_{K-bol} and mode visibilities for different effective temperatures Teff within the range 4000-7500 K, using a similar approach to a recent one from the literature (Michel et al. 2009, A&A 495, 979). We derive a law for the correction to bolometric values: c_{K-bol} = 1 + a_1 (Teff-To) + a_2 (Teff-To)^2, with To = 5934 K, a_1 = 1.349e-4 K^{-1}, and a_2 = -3.120e-9 K^{-2} or, alternatively, as the power law c_{K-bol} = (Teff/To)^alpha…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
