Asteroseismology of three evolved stars in M67: testing systematic biases in seismic masses and ages

Author:

Li (李坦达) Tanda123ORCID,Bi (毕少兰) Shaolan12,Davies Guy R3,Bedding Timothy R4ORCID,Li (李亚光) Yaguang4ORCID,Stello Dennis5,Reyes Claudia5

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Frontiers in Astronomy and Astrophysics, Beijing Normal University , Beijing 102206 , China

2. Department of Astronomy, Beijing Normal University , Beijing 100875 , China

3. School of Physics and Astronomy, The University of Birmingham , B15 2TT , UK

4. Sydney Institute for Astronomy (SIfA), School of Physics, University of Sydney , NSW 2006 , Australia

5. School of Physics, University of New South Wales , Sydney,NSW 2052 , Australia

Abstract

ABSTRACT Asteroseismology can precisely characterize stars, but the accuracy of seismic inference is still an open question. In this work, we use three evolved stars, including one late subgiant (EPIC 211411922) and two young red giants (EPIC 211409560 and EPIC 211416749) in the open cluster M67 to validate seismic inferences of stellar mass and age. We start by measuring oscillation mode frequencies and identifying acoustic and mixed modes in all three stars. We then fit the stars to determine their masses and ages with a detailed modelling approach. Our age estimates for all stars agree well with the literature consensus age range of M67 (3.0–5.0 Gyr). Mass estimates for EPIC 211411922 and EPIC 211409560 are sensible because they are slightly higher than the typical turn-off mass of the cluster. The inferred mass for EPIC 211416749 is underestimated by 5–10 per cent compared with the turn-off mass, but this could be caused by poor data quality. Our results indicate that the detailed modelling can determine sensible masses and ages for evolved stars near the base of the red giant branch.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Chinese Academy of Sciences

European Research Council

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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