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Internal structure of red-giant stars through the sound of dipole oscillation modes

Project description

Research sheds more light on the internal structure of red giants

What would a star look like below its opaque surface? What are the physical conditions in a star? Observations and measurements of a star's oscillation modes enable astronomers to obtain further information about the internal structure of the star, which is otherwise difficult to derive from its overall properties such as its brightness and surface temperature. The goal of the EU-funded DipolarSound project is to apply the tools of asteroseismology to the study of red giants. Using mixed dipole oscillation modes, the project will investigate the physical conditions and processes at play in red giant stars. Moreover, it will investigate the underlying physical origin of the different oscillation spectra observed.

Objective

What would a star look like below its opaque surface? What are the physical conditions in a star? What physical processes play an important role in stars? How do these physical conditions and processes interact? How do they change with time, when a star evolves? Answering these kinds of questions is of fundamental importance for astronomy and beyond. Stars are a dominant source of light in the universe as well as main building blocks of planetary systems and galaxies. Thus, understanding of stars has a major impact in these fields. Closer to home, understanding the past and future of the Sun has a potentially wide-ranging impact on other scientific fields. To pierce inside stars, we need observable features that are sensitive to the hidden layers in stars. Intrinsic global oscillations are observable, and are sensitive to the internal structures of stars. The application of these global modes to study internal stellar structures is the field of asteroseismology. Particularly interesting and opportune stars to apply asteroseismology to are red-giant stars. These evolved stars are abundant, relatively bright, exhibit different stellar structures, allow to trace back a long history, and possess probes that are sensitive to both their deep and their more shallow layers; the so-called mixed dipole oscillation modes. The observed characteristics of mixed dipole modes differ significantly between different red-giant stars, leading to the following questions: • ‘What are the physical differences in the structures of / conditions in red-giant stars which lead to different mixed dipole mode oscillation spectra?’ • ‘What is the cause of the different structures / conditions in these stars?’ The aim of the DipolarSound proposal is to unravel the physical conditions and physical processes at play in red-giant stars using mixed dipole oscillation modes and to understand the underlying physical origin of the different oscillation spectra observed in red-giant stars.

Host institution

HITS GGMBH
Net EU contribution
€ 2 000 000,00
Address
SCHLOSS WOLFSBRUNNENWEG 35
69118 Heidelberg
Germany

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SME

The organization defined itself as SME (small and medium-sized enterprise) at the time the Grant Agreement was signed.

Yes
Region
Baden-Württemberg Karlsruhe Heidelberg, Stadtkreis
Activity type
Research Organisations
Links
Total cost
€ 2 000 000,00

Beneficiaries (1)