Asteroseismology of red giants from the first four months of Kepler data: Global oscillation parameters for 800 stars

Abstract

We have studied solar-like oscillations in ~800 red-giant stars using Kepler long-cadence photometry. The sample includes stars ranging in evolution from the lower part of the red-giant branch to the Helium main sequence. We investigate the relation between the large frequency separation (Delta nu) and the frequency of maximum power (numax) and show that it is different for red giants than for main-sequence stars, which is consistent with evolutionary models and scaling relations. The distributions of numax and Delta nu are in qualitative agreement with a simple stellar population model of the Kepler field, including the first evidence for a secondary clump population characterized by M ~> 2 Msun and numax ~ 40-110 muHz. We measured the small frequency separations delta nu02 and delta nu01 in over 400 stars and delta nu03 in over 40. We present C-D diagrams for l=1, 2 and 3 and show that the frequency separation ratios delta nu02/Delta nu and delta nu01/Delta nu have opposite trends as a function of Delta nu. The data show a narrowing of the l=1 ridge towards lower numax, in agreement with models predicting more efficient mode trapping in stars with higher luminosity. We investigate the offset epsilon in the asymptotic relation and find a clear correlation with Delta nu, demonstrating that it is related to fundamental stellar parameters. Finally, we present the first amplitude-numax relation for Kepler red giants. We observe a lack of low-amplitude stars for numax ~> 110 muHz and find that, for a given numax between 40-110 muHz, stars with lower Delta nu (and consequently higher mass) tend to show lower amplitudes than stars with higher Delta nu.

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