Institute for Advanced Study Informal Astrophysics Seminar
New Light on Stellar Astrophysics with Kepler
ABSTRACT: Stellar magnetic activity leads to a variety of observable effects, from
star spots that modulate the stellar brightness on the order of weeks to
months, to flares, which release highly energetic radiation over the course
of a few hours. Much of our understanding of these phenomena comes from
observations of the sun, where surface spatial resolution and high time
cadence afford us rich detail unavailable for other stars. As studies of
stellar spots and flares tend to sample stars that are extremely active,
much more so than our sun, our pictures of solar and stellar cover
different regimes and are not yet congruous. The Kepler mission has now
obtained nearly three years of precise photometry for stars both like our
sun and considerably different from it. Although Kepler's main goal is the
discovery of exoplanets, it has made unprecedented contributions to stellar
astrophysics. These new data offer a new chance to not only understand the
stars themselves, but to understand the range of circumstellar habitats in
which planets exist. In this talk, I will discuss our ongoing work to
characterize the variability due to starspots, stellar rotation and flares
in the Kepler planet host stars and the larger sample of targets as a whole.
Date & Time
May 10, 2012 | 11:00am – 12:00pm
Location
Bloomberg Hall, Astrophysics LibrarySpeakers
Lucianne Walkowicz
Affiliation
Princeton University