The Kepler characterization of the variability among A- and F-type stars. I. General overview
K. Uytterhoeven, A. Moya, A. Grigahcene, J.A. Guzik, J., Gutierrez-Soto, B. Smalley, G. Handler, L.A. Balona, E. Niemczura, L. Fox, Machado, S. Benatti, E. Chapellier, A. Tkachenko, R. Szabo, J.C. Suarez, V., Ripepi, J. Pascual, P. Mathias, S. Martin-Ruiz, H. Lehmann

TL;DR
This study uses Kepler data to classify and analyze the pulsational behavior of 750 A-F type stars, revealing a high fraction of hybrid pulsators and challenging existing models of stellar variability.
Contribution
It provides the first large-scale characterization of A-F star pulsations, identifying a significant number of hybrid stars and extending the known instability strips.
Findings
23% of stars are hybrid pulsators, more than previously observed.
Hybrid stars show a wide range of frequencies within expected pulsation ranges.
Indications of delta Sct and gamma Dor stars beyond current instability strip edges.
Abstract
The Kepler spacecraft is providing time series of photometric data with micromagnitude precision for hundreds of A-F type stars. We present a first general characterization of the pulsational behaviour of A-F type stars as observed in the Kepler light curves of a sample of 750 candidate A-F type stars. We propose three main groups to describe the observed variety in pulsating A-F type stars: gamma Dor, delta Sct, and hybrid stars. We assign 63% of our sample to one of the three groups, and identify the remaining part as rotationally modulated/active stars, binaries, stars of different spectral type, or stars that show no clear periodic variability. 23% of the stars (171 stars) are hybrid stars, which is a much larger fraction than what has been observed before. We characterize for the first time a large number of A-F type stars (475 stars) in terms of number of detected frequencies,…
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