排序方式: 共有5条查询结果,搜索用时 15 毫秒
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Bedding TR Mosser B Huber D Montalbán J Beck P Christensen-Dalsgaard J Elsworth YP García RA Miglio A Stello D White TR De Ridder J Hekker S Aerts C Barban C Belkacem K Broomhall AM Brown TM Buzasi DL Carrier F Chaplin WJ Di Mauro MP Dupret MA Frandsen S Gilliland RL Goupil MJ Jenkins JM Kallinger T Kawaler S Kjeldsen H Mathur S Noels A Aguirre VS Ventura P 《Nature》2011,471(7340):608-611
Red giants are evolved stars that have exhausted the supply of hydrogen in their cores and instead burn hydrogen in a surrounding shell. Once a red giant is sufficiently evolved, the helium in the core also undergoes fusion. Outstanding issues in our understanding of red giants include uncertainties in the amount of mass lost at the surface before helium ignition and the amount of internal mixing from rotation and other processes. Progress is hampered by our inability to distinguish between red giants burning helium in the core and those still only burning hydrogen in a shell. Asteroseismology offers a way forward, being a powerful tool for probing the internal structures of stars using their natural oscillation frequencies. Here we report observations of gravity-mode period spacings in red giants that permit a distinction between evolutionary stages to be made. We use high-precision photometry obtained by the Kepler spacecraft over more than a year to measure oscillations in several hundred red giants. We find many stars whose dipole modes show sequences with approximately regular period spacings. These stars fall into two clear groups, allowing us to distinguish unambiguously between hydrogen-shell-burning stars (period spacing mostly ~ 50 seconds) and those that are also burning helium (period spacing ~ 100 to 300 seconds). 相似文献
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R A Bedding 《Nature》1967,214(5084):174-175
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Beck PG Montalban J Kallinger T De Ridder J Aerts C García RA Hekker S Dupret MA Mosser B Eggenberger P Stello D Elsworth Y Frandsen S Carrier F Hillen M Gruberbauer M Christensen-Dalsgaard J Miglio A Valentini M Bedding TR Kjeldsen H Girouard FR Hall JR Ibrahim KA 《Nature》2012,481(7379):55-57
When the core hydrogen is exhausted during stellar evolution, the central region of a star contracts and the outer envelope expands and cools, giving rise to a red giant. Convection takes place over much of the star's radius. Conservation of angular momentum requires that the cores of these stars rotate faster than their envelopes; indirect evidence supports this. Information about the angular-momentum distribution is inaccessible to direct observations, but it can be extracted from the effect of rotation on oscillation modes that probe the stellar interior. Here we report an increasing rotation rate from the surface of the star to the stellar core in the interiors of red giants, obtained using the rotational frequency splitting of recently detected 'mixed modes'. By comparison with theoretical stellar models, we conclude that the core must rotate at least ten times faster than the surface. This observational result confirms the theoretical prediction of a steep gradient in the rotation profile towards the deep stellar interior. 相似文献
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Antoci V Handler G Campante TL Thygesen AO Moya A Kallinger T Stello D Grigahcène A Kjeldsen H Bedding TR Lüftinger T Christensen-Dalsgaard J Catanzaro G Frasca A De Cat P Uytterhoeven K Bruntt H Houdek G Kurtz DW Lenz P Kaiser A Van Cleve J Allen C Clarke BD 《Nature》2011,477(7366):570-573
Delta Scuti (δSct) stars are opacity-driven pulsators with masses of 1.5-2.5 M⊙, their pulsations resulting from the varying ionization of helium. In less massive stars such as the Sun, convection transports mass and energy through the outer 30 per cent of the star and excites a rich spectrum of resonant acoustic modes. Based on the solar example, with no firm theoretical basis, models predict that the convective envelope in δSct stars extends only about 1 per cent of the radius, but with sufficient energy to excite solar-like oscillations. This was not observed before the Kepler mission, so the presence of a convective envelope in the models has been questioned. Here we report the detection of solar-like oscillations in the δSct star HD187547, implying that surface convection operates efficiently in stars about twice as massive as the Sun, as the ad hoc models predicted. 相似文献
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Norris BR Tuthill PG Ireland MJ Lacour S Zijlstra AA Lykou F Evans TM Stewart P Bedding TR 《Nature》2012,484(7393):220-222
An intermediate-mass star ends its life by ejecting the bulk of its envelope in a slow, dense wind. Stellar pulsations are thought to elevate gas to an altitude cool enough for the condensation of dust, which is then accelerated by radiation pressure, entraining the gas and driving the wind. Explaining the amount of mass loss, however, has been a problem because of the difficulty of observing tenuous gas and dust only tens of milliarcseconds from the star. For this reason, there is no consensus on the way sufficient momentum is transferred from the light from the star to the outflow. Here we report spatially resolved, multiwavelength observations of circumstellar dust shells of three stars on the asymptotic giant branch of the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram. When imaged in scattered light, dust shells were found at remarkably small radii (less than about two stellar radii) and with unexpectedly large grains (about 300 nanometres in radius). This proximity to the photosphere argues for dust species that are transparent to the light from the star and, therefore, resistant to sublimation by the intense radiation field. Although transparency usually implies insufficient radiative pressure to drive a wind, the radiation field can accelerate these large grains through photon scattering rather than absorption--a plausible mass loss mechanism for lower-amplitude pulsating stars. 相似文献
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