The connection between stellar granulation and oscillation as seen by the Kepler mission
T. Kallinger, J. De Ridder, S. Hekker, S. Mathur, B. Mosser, M., Gruberbauer, R. A. Garcia, C. Karoff, J. Ballot

TL;DR
This study analyzes Kepler data to understand the relationship between stellar granulation and oscillations, establishing scaling laws and highlighting systematic uncertainties in background modeling.
Contribution
It introduces a probabilistic method for extracting granulation signals and quantifies their scaling relations with stellar parameters, improving understanding of stellar surface convection.
Findings
Granulation background scales with u_{max} across various stars.
A depression at u_{max}/2 is significant in red giants.
Background model choice affects u_{max} determination.
Abstract
The long and almost continuous observations by Kepler show clear evidence of a granulation background signal in a large sample of stars, which is interpreted as the surface manifestation of convection. It has been shown that its characteristic timescale and rms intensity fluctuation scale with the peak frequency (\nu_{max}) of the solar-like oscillations. Various attempts have been made to quantify the observed signal, to determine scaling relations, and to compare them to theoretical predictions. We use a probabilistic method to compare different approaches to extracting the granulation signal. We fit the power density spectra of a large set of Kepler targets, determine the granulation and global oscillation parameter, and quantify scaling relations between them. We establish that a depression in power at about \nu_{max}/2, known from the Sun and a few other main-sequence stars, is…
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