The Mass of the Planet-hosting Giant Star Beta Geminorum Determined from its p-mode Oscillation Spectrum
A.P. Hatzes, M. Zechmeister, J. Matthews, R. Kuschnig, G.A.H. Walker,, M. Doellinger, D.B. Guenther, A.F.J. Moffat, S.M. Rucinski, D. Sasselov

TL;DR
This study combines radial velocity and photometric data to analyze Beta Gem's p-mode oscillations, leading to an accurate stellar mass estimate and confirming its intermediate mass status, which aids in stellar evolution calibration.
Contribution
It provides a novel combined analysis of radial velocity and space-based photometry to determine the mass of a giant star through its pulsation spectrum.
Findings
Detected up to 17 pulsation modes in Beta Gem.
Identified a regular frequency spacing of 7.14 micro-Hz.
Derived a stellar mass of 1.91 solar masses.
Abstract
We use precise radial velocity measurements and photometric data to derive the frequency spacing of the p-mode oscillation spectrum of the planet-hosting star Beta Gem. This spacing along with the interferometric radius for this star is used to derive an accurate stellar mass. A long time series of over 60 hours of precise stellar radial velocity measurements of Beta Gem were taken with an iodine absorption cell and the echelle spectrograph mounted on the 2m Alfred Jensch Telescope. Complementary photometric data for this star were also taken with the MOST microsatellite spanning 3.6 d. A Fourier analysis of the radial velocity data reveals the presence of up to 17 significant pulsation modes in the frequency interval 10-250 micro-Hz. Most of these fall on a grid of equally-spaced frequencies having a separation of 7.14 +/- 0.12 micro-Hz. An analysis of 3.6 days of high precision…
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