The Astrophysical Journal (Jan 2024)

Stellar Models are Reliable at Low Metallicity: An Asteroseismic Age for the Ancient Very Metal-poor Star KIC 8144907

  • Daniel Huber,
  • Ditte Slumstrup,
  • Marc Hon,
  • Yaguang Li,
  • Victor Aguirre Børsen-Koch,
  • Timothy R. Bedding,
  • Meridith Joyce,
  • J. M. Joel Ong,
  • Aldo Serenelli,
  • Dennis Stello,
  • Travis Berger,
  • Samuel K. Grunblatt,
  • Michael Greklek-McKeon,
  • Teruyuki Hirano,
  • Evan N. Kirby,
  • Marc H. Pinsonneault,
  • Arthur Alencastro Puls,
  • Joel Zinn

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ad7110
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 975, no. 1
p. 19

Abstract

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Very-metal-poor stars ([Fe/H] < −2) are important laboratories for testing stellar models and reconstructing the formation history of our galaxy. Asteroseismology is a powerful tool to probe stellar interiors and measure ages, but few asteroseismic detections are known in very-metal-poor stars and none have allowed detailed modeling of oscillation frequencies. We report the discovery of a low-luminosity Kepler red giant (KIC 8144907) with high signal-to-noise ratio oscillations, [Fe/H] = −2.66 ± 0.08 and [ α /Fe] = 0.38 ± 0.06, making it by far the most metal-poor star to date for which detailed asteroseismic modeling is possible. By combining the oscillation spectrum from Kepler with high-resolution spectroscopy, we measure an asteroseismic mass and age of 0.79 ± 0.02(ran) ± 0.01(sys) M _⊙ and 12.0 ± 0.6(ran) ± 0.4(sys) Gyr, with remarkable agreement across different codes and input physics, demonstrating that stellar models and asteroseismology are reliable for very-metal-poor stars when individual frequencies are used. The results also provide a direct age anchor for the early formation of the Milky Way, implying that substantial star formation did not commence until redshift z ≈ 3 (if the star formed in situ) or that the Milky Way has undergone merger events for at least ≈12 Gyr (if the star was accreted by a dwarf satellite merger such as Gaia-Enceladus).

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