Metallicity effect on stellar granulation detected from oscillating red giants in open clusters
E. Corsaro, S. Mathur, R. A. Garc\'ia, P. Gaulme, M. Pinsonneault, K., Stassun, D. Stello, J. Tayar, R. Trampedach, C. Jiang, C. Nitschelm, D., Salabert

TL;DR
This study investigates how metallicity influences stellar granulation in red giants, revealing that higher metallicity increases granulation amplitude and extends time scales, surpassing effects from mass and surface gravity.
Contribution
It provides new scaling relations for stellar granulation and quantifies metallicity's significant impact on granulation properties in red giants.
Findings
Metallicity significantly affects granulation amplitude and time scales.
Higher metallicity leads to longer characteristic time scales.
Metallicity's impact exceeds that of mass and surface gravity.
Abstract
The effect of metallicity on the granulation activity in stars is still poorly understood. Available spectroscopic parameters from the updated APOGEE-\textit{Kepler} catalog, coupled with high-precision photometric observations from NASA's \textit{Kepler} mission spanning more than four years of observation, make oscillating red giant stars in open clusters crucial testbeds. We determine the role of metallicity on the stellar granulation activity by discriminating its effect from that of different stellar properties such as surface gravity, mass, and temperature. We analyze 60 known red giant stars belonging to the open clusters NGC 6791, NGC 6819, and NGC 6811, spanning a metallicity range from [Fe/H] to . The parameters describing the granulation activity of these stars and their , are studied by considering the different masses, metallicities,…
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