What asteroseismology can do for exoplanets

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Abstract

We describe three useful applications of asteroseismology in the context of exoplanet science: (1) the detailed characterisation of exoplanet host stars; (2) the measurement of stellar inclinations; and (3) the determination of orbital eccentricity from transit duration making use of asteroseismic stellar densities. We do so using the example system Kepler-410 [1]. This is one of the brightest (V = 9.4) Kepler exoplanet host stars, containing a small (2.8 R) transiting planet in a long orbit (17.8 days), and one or more additional non-transiting planets as indicated by transit timing variations. The validation of Kepler-410 (KOI-42) was complicated due to the presence of a companion star, and the planetary nature of the system was confirmed after analyzing a Spitzer transit observation as well as ground-based follow-up observations.

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Van Eylen, V., Lund, M. N., Silva Aguirre, V., Arentoft, T., Kjeldsen, H., Albrecht, S., … Bryson, S. T. (2015). What asteroseismology can do for exoplanets. In EPJ Web of Conferences (Vol. 101). EDP Sciences. https://doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/201510102005

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