A Refined Model of Convectively-Driven Flicker in Kepler Light Curves
Samuel J. Van Kooten, Evan H. Anders, and Steven R. Cranmer

TL;DR
This paper refines models of stellar brightness fluctuations caused by convection, incorporating bandpass effects, metallicity, and simulation data, to better predict flicker amplitudes in Kepler light curves.
Contribution
The authors improve existing convective flicker models by including Kepler bandpass effects, metallicity, and broader simulation scaling, reducing prediction errors.
Findings
Model prediction error reduced from a factor of 2.5 to 2.
Binary companions may influence convective flicker.
78% of observed stars' flicker amplitudes are within the model's predicted range.
Abstract
Light curves produced by the Kepler mission demonstrate stochastic brightness fluctuations (or "flicker") of stellar origin which contribute to the noise floor, limiting the sensitivity of exoplanet detection and characterization methods. In stars with surface convection, the primary driver of these variations on short (sub-eight-hour) timescales is believed to be convective granulation. In this work, we improve existing models of this granular flicker amplitude, or , by including the effect of the Kepler bandpass on measured flicker, by incorporating metallicity in determining convective Mach numbers, and by using scaling relations from a wider set of numerical simulations. To motivate and validate these changes, we use a recent database of convective flicker measurements in Kepler stars, which allows us to more fully detail the remaining model--prediction error. Our model…
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