# First detection of oscillations in the Halo giant HD 122563: validation   of seismic scaling relations and new fundamental parameters

**Authors:** Orlagh Creevey, Frank Grundahl, Fr\'ed\'eric Th\'evenin, Enrico, Corsaro, P. L. Pall\'e, David Salabert, Bernard Pichon, Remo Collet, Lionel, Bigot, Victoria Antoci, Mads F. Andersen

arXiv: 1902.02657 · 2019-05-08

## TL;DR

This study reports the first detection of solar-like oscillations in the metal-poor giant HD 122563, validating seismic scaling relations and refining its fundamental stellar parameters through combined observational and modeling approaches.

## Contribution

It provides the first seismic detection in this star, confirms the validity of scaling relations in metal-poor giants, and refines fundamental parameters using combined seismic, interferometric, and Gaia data.

## Key findings

- First detection of oscillations in HD 122563
- Validation of seismic scaling relations in metal-poor giants
- Refined stellar parameters consistent with models

## Abstract

The nearby metal-poor giant HD122563 is an important astrophysical laboratory for which to test stellar atmospheric and interior physics. It is also a benchmark star for which to calibrate methods to apply to large scale surveys. Recently it has been remeasured using various methodologies given the new high precision instruments at our disposal. However, inconsistencies in the observations and models have been found. In order to better characterise this star we have been measuring its radial velocities since 2016 using the Hertzsprung telescope (SONG network node). In this work we report the first detections of sun-like oscillations in this star, and to our knowledge, a detection in the most metal-poor giant to date. We apply the classical seismic scaling relation to derive a new surface gravity of $\log g_{\nu} = 1.39 \pm 0.01$ dex. Constraints on the mass imposed by its PopII giant classification then yield a radius of $30.8 \pm 1.0$ R$_{\odot}$. By coupling this with recent interferometric measurements we infer a distance to the star of 306 $\pm$ 9 pc. Data from the Gaia mission corroborates the distance hypothesis ($d_{\rm GDR2}$ = 290 $\pm$ 5 pc), and thus the updated fundamental parameters. We confirm the validity of the seismic scaling relation without corrections for surface gravity in metal-poor and evolved star regimes. The small discrepancy of 0.04 dex reduces to 0.02 dex by applying corrections to the scaling relations. The new constraints on the HR diagram ($L_{\odot} = 381 \pm 26$) reduce the disagreement between the stellar parameters and evolution models, however, a discrepancy still exists. Fine-tuned stellar evolution calculations show that this can be reconciled by changing the mixing-length parameter by an amount (--0.35) that is in agreement with predictions from recent 3D simulations and empirical results.

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

56 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1902.02657/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1902.02657