Beyond Gaia: Asteroseismic Distances of M Giants Using Ground-based Transient Surveys

  • Auge C
  • Huber D
  • Heinze A
  • et al.
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Abstract

Evolved stars near the tip of the red giant branch show solar-like oscillations with periods spanning hours to months and amplitudes ranging from ∼1 mmag to ∼100 mmag. The systematic detection of the resulting photometric variations with ground-based telescopes would enable the application of asteroseismology to a much larger and more distant sample of stars than is currently accessible with space-based telescopes such as Kepler or the ongoing Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite mission. We present an asteroseismic analysis of 493 M giants using data from two ground-based surveys: the Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS) and the All-Sky Automated Survey for Supernovae (ASAS-SN). By comparing the extracted frequencies with constraints from Kepler, the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Apache Point Observatory Galaxy Evolution Experiment, and Gaia we demonstrate that ground-based transient surveys allow accurate distance measurements to oscillating M giants with a precision of ∼15%. Using stellar population synthesis models we predict that ATLAS and ASAS-SN can provide asteroseismic distances to ∼2 × 10 6 galactic M giants out to typical distances of 20–50 kpc, vastly improving the reach of Gaia and providing critical constraints for Galactic archeology and galactic dynamics.

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APA

Auge, C., Huber, D., Heinze, A., Shappee, B. J., Tonry, J., Chakrabarti, S., … Thompson, T. A. (2020). Beyond Gaia: Asteroseismic Distances of M Giants Using Ground-based Transient Surveys. The Astronomical Journal, 160(1), 18. https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ab91bf

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