Bibcode
Bugnet, L.; García, R. A.; Mathur, S.; Davies, G. R.; Hall, O. J.; Lund, M. N.; Rendle, B. M.
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 624, id.A79, 8 pp.
Advertised on:
4
2019
Journal
Citations
7
Refereed citations
6
Description
The NASA Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) is about to
provide full-frame images of almost the entire sky. The amount of
stellar data to be analysed represents hundreds of millions stars, which
is several orders of magnitude more than the number of stars observed by
the Convection, Rotation and planetary Transits satellite (CoRoT), and
NASA Kepler and K2 missions. We aim at automatically classifying the
newly observed stars with near real-time algorithms to better guide the
subsequent detailed studies. In this paper, we present a classification
algorithm built to recognise solar-like pulsators among classical
pulsators. This algorithm relies on the global amount of power contained
in the power spectral density (PSD), also known as the flicker in
spectral power density (FliPer). Because each type of pulsating star has
a characteristic background or pulsation pattern, the shape of the PSD
at different frequencies can be used to characterise the type of
pulsating star. The FliPer classifier (FliPerClass) uses
different FliPer parameters along with the effective temperature as
input parameters to feed a ML algorithm in order to automatically
classify the pulsating stars observed by TESS. Using noisy
TESS-simulated data from the TESS Asteroseismic Science Consortium
(TASC), we classify pulsators with a 98% accuracy. Among them,
solar-like pulsating stars are recognised with a 99% accuracy, which is
of great interest for a further seismic analysis of these stars, which
are like our Sun. Similar results are obtained when we trained our
classifier and applied it to 27-day subsets of real Kepler data.
FliPerClass is part of the large TASC classification pipeline
developed by the TESS Data for Asteroseismology (T'DA) classification
working group.
Related projects
Helio and Astero-Seismology and Exoplanets Search
The principal objectives of this project are: 1) to study the structure and dynamics of the solar interior, 2) to extend this study to other stars, 3) to search for extrasolar planets using photometric methods (primarily by transits of their host stars) and their characterization (using radial velocity information) and 4) the study of the planetary
Savita
Mathur