Variability of M giant stars based on Kepler photometry: general characteristics
E. B\'anyai, L. L. Kiss, T. R. Bedding, B. Bellamy, J. M. Benk\H{o},, A. B\'odi, J. R. Callingham, D. Compton, I. Cs\'anyi, A. Derekas, J. Dorval,, D. Huber, O. Shrier, A. E. Simon, D. Stello, Gy. M. Szab\'o, R. Szab\'o, K., Szatm\'ary

TL;DR
This study analyzes the variability of M giant stars using Kepler data, revealing patterns in their pulsations, identifying systematic effects, and distinguishing between different types of stellar oscillations.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of M giant variability over multiple time scales using Kepler data, highlighting systematic effects and oscillation patterns.
Findings
Detection of a Kepler-year signal in over 50 stars
Identification of systematic effects in Kepler data
Distinction between solar-like and Mira/SR star pulsations
Abstract
M giants are among the longest-period pulsating stars which is why their studies were traditionally restricted to analyses of low-precision visual observations, and more recently, accurate ground-based data. Here we present an overview of M giant variability on a wide range of time-scales (hours to years), based on analysis of thirteen quarters of Kepler long-cadence observations (one point per every 29.4 minutes), with a total time-span of over 1000 days. About two-thirds of the sample stars have been selected from the ASAS-North survey of the Kepler field, with the rest supplemented from a randomly chosen M giant control sample. We first describe the correction of the light curves from different quarters, which was found to be essential. We use Fourier analysis to calculate multiple frequencies for all stars in the sample. Over 50 stars show a relatively strong signal with a period…
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