Surface-effect corrections for solar-like oscillations using 3D hydrodynamical simulations
T. Sonoi, R. Samadi, K. Belkacem, H.-G. Ludwig, E. Caffau, B., Mosser

TL;DR
This study uses 3D hydrodynamical simulations to physically model surface effects in solar-like stars, improving the correction of systematic frequency errors in stellar oscillation data.
Contribution
It provides a physical basis for surface-effect corrections by modeling outer stellar layers with 3D simulations and constrains the correction parameters with new formulations.
Findings
Surface effects depend on effective temperature and surface gravity.
Lorentzian correction formulation is more robust across frequencies.
Scaling relations link correction parameters to stellar surface properties.
Abstract
The space-borne missions have provided us with a wealth of high-quality observational data that allows for seismic inferences of stellar interiors. This requires the computation of precise and accurate theoretical frequencies, but imperfect modeling of the uppermost stellar layers introduces systematic errors. To overcome this problem, an empirical correction has been introduced by Kjeldsen et al. (2008, ApJ, 683, L175) and is now commonly used for seismic inferences. Nevertheless, we still lack a physical justification allowing for the quantification of the surface-effect corrections. We used a grid of these simulations computed with the COBOLD code to model the outer layers of solar-like stars. Upper layers of the corresponding 1D standard models were then replaced by the layers obtained from the horizontally averaged 3D models. The frequency differences between these patched…
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