Probing stellar rotation in the Pleiades with gravity-mode pulsators
D. J. Fritzewski, A. Kemp, G. Li, C. Aerts

TL;DR
This study uses TESS data to identify and analyze gravity-mode pulsators in the Pleiades, revealing their internal rotation rates and establishing the cluster as a key benchmark for asteroseismic studies of early main sequence stars.
Contribution
First comprehensive asteroseismic analysis of g-mode pulsators in the Pleiades, providing insights into stellar rotation and internal structure on the early main sequence.
Findings
28 g-mode pulsators identified, including 19 hybrids
Near-core rotation rates range from 1 to 3 d$^{-1}$
Distribution broader than in NGC 2516
Abstract
Due to their proximity, the Pleiades are an important benchmark open cluster. Despite its status, asteroseismic analyses of its members are rare. In particular, the gravity-mode (g-mode) pulsators, which allow inference of stellar near-core properties have not been analysed yet. We aim to identify and analyse the population of g-mode pulsators in the Pleiades. Our focus lies on the internal rotation as measured from asteroseismology to obtain a well defined sample of stellar rotation on the early main sequence. Based on full-frame images from the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS), we constructed light curves for intermediate-mass Pleiades members and searched for g-mode pulsators among them. For pulsators exhibiting period spacing patterns, we determined their near-core rotation rate and buoyancy periods. For all other g-mode pulsators, we estimated the near-core rotation…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
