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Naji, M. |
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Motta, Antonella |
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Aletan, Dirar |
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Mohamed, Tarek |
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Ertürk, Emre |
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Taccardi, Nicola |
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Kononenko, Denys |
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Petrov, R. H. | Madrid |
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Alshaaer, Mazen | Brussels |
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Bih, L. |
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Casati, R. |
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Muller, Hermance |
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Kočí, Jan | Prague |
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Šuljagić, Marija |
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Kalteremidou, Kalliopi-Artemi | Brussels |
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Azam, Siraj |
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Ospanova, Alyiya |
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Blanpain, Bart |
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Ali, M. A. |
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Popa, V. |
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Rančić, M. |
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Ollier, Nadège |
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Azevedo, Nuno Monteiro |
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Landes, Michael |
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Rignanese, Gian-Marco |
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Serenelli, Aldo
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article
Asteroseismology and Gaia: Testing Scaling Relations Using 2200 Kepler Stars with TGAS Parallaxes
Abstract
We present a comparison of parallaxes and radii from asteroseismology and Gaia DR1 (TGAS) for 2200 Kepler stars spanning from the main sequence to the red-giant branch. We show that previously identified offsets between TGAS parallaxes and distances derived from asteroseismology and eclipsing binaries have likely been overestimated for parallaxes ≲ 5{--}10 mas (≈90%-98% of the TGAS sample). The observed differences in our sample can furthermore be partially compensated by adopting a hotter {T}<SUB>{eff</SUB>} scale (such as the infrared flux method) instead of spectroscopic temperatures for dwarfs and subgiants. Residual systematic differences are at the ≈2% level in parallax across three orders of magnitude. We use TGAS parallaxes to empirically demonstrate that asteroseismic radii are accurate to ≈5% or better for stars between ≈ 0.8{--}8 {R}<SUB>☉ </SUB>. We find no significant offset for main-sequence (≲ 1.5 {R}<SUB>☉ </SUB>) and low-luminosity RGB stars (≈3-8 {R}<SUB>☉ </SUB>), but seismic radii appear to be systematically underestimated by ≈5% for subgiants (≈1.5-3 {R}<SUB>☉ </SUB>). We find no systematic errors as a function of metallicity between [{Fe}/{{H}}]≈ -0.8 to +0.4 dex, and show tentative evidence that corrections to the scaling relation for the large frequency separation ({{∆ }}ν ) improve the agreement with TGAS for RGB stars. Finally, we demonstrate that beyond ≈ 3 {kpc} asteroseismology will provide more precise distances than end-of-mission Gaia data, highlighting the synergy and complementary nature of Gaia and asteroseismology for studying galactic stellar populations.