Back to Search Start Over

Asteroseismic masses of four evolved planet-hosting stars using SONG and TESS: resolving the retired A-star mass controversy

Authors :
Malla, Sai Prathyusha
Stello, Dennis
Huber, Daniel
Montet, Benjamin T.
Bedding, Timothy R.
Andersen, Mads Fredslund
Grundahl, Frank
Jessen-Hansen, Jens
Hey, Daniel R.
Palle, Pere L.
Deng, Licai
Zhang, Chunguang
Chen, Xiaodian
Lloyd, James
Antoci, Victoria
Source :
MNRAS 496 2020 5423-5435
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The study of planet occurrence as a function of stellar mass is important for a better understanding of planet formation. Estimating stellar mass, especially in the red giant regime, is difficult. In particular, stellar masses of a sample of evolved planet-hosting stars based on spectroscopy and grid-based modelling have been put to question over the past decade with claims they were overestimated. Although efforts have been made in the past to reconcile this dispute using asteroseismology, results were inconclusive. In an attempt to resolve this controversy, we study four more evolved planet-hosting stars in this paper using asteroseismology, and we revisit previous results to make an informed study of the whole ensemble in a self-consistent way. For the four new stars, we measure their masses by locating their characteristic oscillation frequency, $\mathrm{\nu}_{\mathrm{max}}$, from their radial velocity time series observed by SONG. For two stars, we are also able to measure the large frequency separation, $\mathrm{\Delta\nu}$, helped by extended SONG single-site and dual-site observations and new TESS observations. We establish the robustness of the $\mathrm{\nu}_{\mathrm{max}}$-only-based results by determining the stellar mass from $\mathrm{\Delta\nu}$, and from both $\mathrm{\Delta\nu}$ and $\mathrm{\nu}_{\mathrm{max}}$. We then compare the seismic masses of the full ensemble of 16 stars with the spectroscopic masses from three different literature sources. We find an offset between the seismic and spectroscopic mass scales that is mass-dependent, suggesting that the previously claimed overestimation of spectroscopic masses only affects stars more massive than about 1.6 M$_\mathrm{\odot}$.<br />Comment: 13 pages, 12 figures, Accepted for publication in the Main Journal of MNRAS

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
MNRAS 496 2020 5423-5435
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2006.07649
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/staa1793