FliPer: A global measure of power density to estimate surface gravities of main-sequence Solar-like stars and red giants
L. Bugnet, R. A. Garc\'ia, G. R. Davies, S. Mathur, E. Corsaro, O. J., Hall, B. M. Rendle

TL;DR
FliPer is a new spectral power density metric that estimates stellar surface gravities across a wide range of stars without requiring detailed seismic analysis, using machine learning calibration.
Contribution
The paper introduces FliPer, a spectral power density-based metric for estimating surface gravity, extending applicability to stars with lower $ ext{log}g$ and without detailed seismic data, calibrated with machine learning.
Findings
FliPer accurately estimates $ ext{log}g$ with uncertainties of 0.04 to 0.1 dex.
FliPer extends gravity estimation to stars with $ ext{log}g$ from 0.1 to 4.6 dex.
FliPer can be integrated into automated seismic pipelines for quality assessment.
Abstract
Asteroseismology provides global stellar parameters such as masses, radii or surface gravities using the mean global seismic parameters as well as the effective temperature for thousands of low-mass stars . This methodology has been successfully applied to stars in which acoustic modes excited by turbulent convection are measured. Other techniques such as the Flicker can also be used to determine stellar surface gravities, but only works for above dex. In this work, we present a new metric called FliPer (the acronym stands for Flicker in spectral power density, in opposition to the standard Flicker measurement which is computed in the time domain that is able to extend the range for which reliable surface gravities can be obtained ( dex) without performing any seismic analysis for stars brighter than 14.…
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