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Timothy R. White

Bio: Timothy R. White is an academic researcher from University of Sydney. The author has contributed to research in topics: Stars & Asteroseismology. The author has an hindex of 51, co-authored 130 publications receiving 10033 citations. Previous affiliations of Timothy R. White include Australian Astronomical Observatory & University of Göttingen.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
31 Mar 2011-Nature
TL;DR: Observations of gravity-mode period spacings in red giants that permit a distinction between evolutionary stages to be made, using high-precision photometry obtained by the Kepler spacecraft to measure oscillations in several hundred red giants.
Abstract: Red giants are evolved stars that have exhausted the supply of hydrogen in their cores and instead burn hydrogen in a surrounding shell. Once a red giant is sufficiently evolved, the helium in the core also undergoes fusion. Outstanding issues in our understanding of red giants include uncertainties in the amount of mass lost at the surface before helium ignition and the amount of internal mixing from rotation and other processes. Progress is hampered by our inability to distinguish between red giants burning helium in the core and those still only burning hydrogen in a shell. Asteroseismology offers a way forward, being a powerful tool for probing the internal structures of stars using their natural oscillation frequencies. Here we report observations of gravity-mode period spacings in red giants that permit a distinction between evolutionary stages to be made. We use high-precision photometry obtained by the Kepler spacecraft over more than a year to measure oscillations in several hundred red giants. We find many stars whose dipole modes show sequences with approximately regular period spacings. These stars fall into two clear groups, allowing us to distinguish unambiguously between hydrogen-shell-burning stars (period spacing mostly ~50 seconds) and those that are also burning helium (period spacing ~100 to 300 seconds)

620 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Geoffrey W. Marcy1, Howard Isaacson1, Andrew W. Howard2, Jason F. Rowe3, Jon M. Jenkins3, Stephen T. Bryson3, David W. Latham4, Steve B. Howell3, Thomas N. Gautier5, Natalie M. Batalha3, Leslie A. Rogers5, David R. Ciardi5, Debra A. Fischer6, Ronald L. Gilliland7, Hans Kjeldsen8, Jørgen Christensen-Dalsgaard9, Jørgen Christensen-Dalsgaard8, Daniel Huber3, William J. Chaplin10, William J. Chaplin8, Sarbani Basu6, Lars A. Buchhave11, Lars A. Buchhave4, Samuel N. Quinn4, William J. Borucki3, David G. Koch3, Roger C. Hunter3, Douglas A. Caldwell3, Jeffrey Van Cleve3, Rea Kolbl1, Lauren M. Weiss1, Erik A. Petigura1, Sara Seager12, Timothy D. Morton5, John Asher Johnson5, Sarah Ballard13, Christopher J. Burke3, William D. Cochran14, Michael Endl14, Phillip J. MacQueen14, Mark E. Everett, Jack J. Lissauer3, Eric B. Ford7, Guillermo Torres4, Francois Fressin4, Timothy M. Brown15, Jason H. Steffen16, David Charbonneau4, Gibor Basri1, Dimitar Sasselov4, Joshua N. Winn12, Roberto Sanchis-Ojeda12, Jessie L. Christiansen3, Elisabeth R. Adams17, Christopher E. Henze3, Andrea K. Dupree4, Daniel C. Fabrycky18, Jonathan J. Fortney19, Jill Tarter3, Matthew J. Holman4, Peter Tenenbaum3, Avi Shporer5, Philip W. Lucas20, William F. Welsh21, Jerome A. Orosz21, Timothy R. Bedding22, Tiago L. Campante8, Tiago L. Campante10, Guy R. Davies10, Guy R. Davies8, Y. P. Elsworth10, Y. P. Elsworth8, Rasmus Handberg10, Rasmus Handberg8, Saskia Hekker23, Saskia Hekker24, Christoffer Karoff8, Steven D. Kawaler25, Mikkel N. Lund8, Mia S. Lundkvist8, Travis S. Metcalfe26, Andrea Miglio10, Andrea Miglio8, V. Silva Aguirre8, Dennis Stello22, Timothy R. White22, Alan P. Boss27, Edna DeVore3, Alan Gould28, Andrej Prsa29, Eric Agol13, Thomas Barclay, Jeffrey L. Coughlin, Erik Brugamyer14, Fergal Mullally3, Elisa V. Quintana3, Martin Still, Susan E. Thompson3, David Morrison3, Joseph D. Twicken3, Jean-Michel Desert4, J. A. Carter12, Justin R. Crepp30, Guillaume Hébrard31, Guillaume Hébrard32, Alexandre Santerne33, Alexandre Santerne34, Claire Moutou, Charlie Sobeck3, Douglas Hudgins, Michael R. Haas3, Paul Robertson14, Paul Robertson7, Jorge Lillo-Box35, David Barrado35 
TL;DR: In this paper, the masses, sizes, and orbits of the planets orbiting 22 Kepler stars were reported, including 42 detected through transits and 7 revealed by precise Doppler measurements of the host stars.
Abstract: We report on the masses, sizes, and orbits of the planets orbiting 22 Kepler stars. There are 49 planet candidates around these stars, including 42 detected through transits and 7 revealed by precise Doppler measurements of the host stars. Based on an analysis of the Kepler brightness measurements, along with high-resolution imaging and spectroscopy, Doppler spectroscopy, and (for 11 stars) asteroseismology, we establish low false-positive probabilities (FPPs) for all of the transiting planets (41 of 42 have an FPP under 1%), and we constrain their sizes and masses. Most of the transiting planets are smaller than three times the size of Earth. For 16 planets, the Doppler signal was securely detected, providing a direct measurement of the planet's mass. For the other 26 planets we provide either marginal mass measurements or upper limits to their masses and densities; in many cases we can rule out a rocky composition. We identify six planets with densities above 5 g cm(-3), suggesting a mostly rocky interior for them. Indeed, the only planets that are compatible with a purely rocky composition are smaller than similar to 2 R-circle plus. Larger planets evidently contain a larger fraction of low-density material (H, He, and H2O).

565 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Geoffrey W. Marcy, Howard Isaacson, Andrew W. Howard, Jason F. Rowe, Jon M. Jenkins, Stephen T. Bryson, David W. Latham, Steve B. Howell, Thomas N. Gautier, Natalie M. Batalha, Leslie A. Rogers, David R. Ciardi, Debra A. Fischer, Ronald L. Gilliland, Hans Kjeldsen, Jørgen Christensen-Dalsgaard, Daniel Huber, William J. Chaplin, Sarbani Basu, Lars A. Buchhave, Samuel N. Quinn, William J. Borucki, David G. Koch, Roger C. Hunter, Douglas A. Caldwell, Jeffrey Van Cleve, Rea Kolbl, Lauren M. Weiss, Erik A. Petigura, Sara Seager, Timothy D. Morton, John Asher Johnson, Sarah Ballard, Christopher J. Burke, William D. Cochran, Michael Endl, Phillip J. MacQueen, Mark E. Everett, Jack J. Lissauer, Eric B. Ford, Guillermo Torres, Francois Fressin, Timothy M. Brown, Jason H. Steffen, David Charbonneau, Gibor Basri, Dimitar Sasselov, Joshua N. Winn, Roberto Sanchis-Ojeda, Jessie L. Christiansen, Elisabeth R. Adams, Christopher E. Henze, Andrea K. Dupree, Daniel C. Fabrycky, Jonathan J. Fortney, Jill Tarter, Matthew J. Holman, Peter Tenenbaum, Avi Shporer, Philip W. Lucas, William F. Welsh, Jerome A. Orosz, Timothy R. Bedding, Tiago L. Campante, Guy R. Davies, Yvonne Elsworth, Rasmus Handberg, Saskia Hekker, Christoffer Karoff, Steven D. Kawaler, Mikkel N. Lund, M. Lundkvist, Travis S. Metcalfe, Andrea Miglio, V. Silva Aguirre, Dennis Stello, Timothy R. White, Alan P. Boss, Edna DeVore, Alan Gould, Andrej Prsa, Eric Agol, Thomas Barclay, Jeffrey L. Coughlin, Erik Brugamyer, Fergal Mullally, Elisa V. Quintana, Martin Still, Susan E. hompson, David Morrison, Joseph D. Twicken, Jean-Michel Desert, J. A. Carter, Justin R. Crepp, Guillaume Hébrard, Alexandre Santerne, Claire Moutou, Charlie Sobeck, Douglas Hudgins, Michael R. Haas, Paul Robertson, Jorge Lillo-Box, David Barrado 
TL;DR: In this article, the masses, sizes, and orbits of the planets orbiting 22 Kepler stars were reported, including 49 candidates detected through transits and 7 revealed by precise Doppler measurements of the host stars.
Abstract: We report on the masses, sizes, and orbits of the planets orbiting 22 Kepler stars. There are 49 planet candidates around these stars, including 42 detected through transits and 7 revealed by precise Doppler measurements of the host stars. Based on an analysis of the Kepler brightness measurements, along with high-resolution imaging and spectroscopy, Doppler spectroscopy, and (for 11 stars) asteroseismology, we establish low false-positive probabilities for all of the transiting planets (41 of 42 have a false-positive probability under 1%), and we constrain their sizes and masses. Most of the transiting planets are smaller than 3X the size of Earth. For 16 planets, the Doppler signal was securely detected, providing a direct measurement of the planet's mass. For the other 26 planets we provide either marginal mass measurements or upper limits to their masses and densities; in many cases we can rule out a rocky composition. We identify 6 planets with densities above 5 g/cc, suggesting a mostly rocky interior for them. Indeed, the only planets that are compatible with a purely rocky composition are smaller than ~2 R_earth. Larger planets evidently contain a larger fraction of low-density material (H, He, and H2O).

528 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a broad hump between about 10 keV and about 300 keV was predicted for the X-ray spectrum of active galactic nuclei (AGNs), and the predicted amplitude of the hump is about 0.1-0.5.
Abstract: Recent observations and interpretations of the strong UV emission from active galactic nuclei (AGNs) suggest that relatively cold, thermal matter coexists with the hot, X-ray-emitting matter near the centers of these objects. A fraction of the X-rays will be reprocessed by the cold material, and the composite X-ray spectrum should help diagnose the conditions of this material and its energy source. In a variety of situations, reprocessing of the X-rays should lead to a composite X-ray spectrum with a broad hump between about 10 keV and about 300 keV. The lower limit of this energy range is determined by atomic absorption and the upper limit by electron scattering in the cold material. Where available, observed spectra are consistent with such a broad hump; however, the predicted amplitude of the hump is about 0.1-0.5, and observations with smaller error bars are clearly needed. 30 references.

419 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
08 Apr 2011-Science
TL;DR: It is found that the distribution of observed masses of these stars shows intriguing differences to predictions from models of synthetic stellar populations in the Galaxy.
Abstract: In addition to its search for extrasolar planets, the NASA Kepler mission provides exquisite data on stellar oscillations. We report the detections of oscillations in 500 solar-type stars in the Kepler field of view, an ensemble that is large enough to allow statistical studies of intrinsic stellar properties (such as mass, radius, and age) and to test theories of stellar evolution. We find that the distribution of observed masses of these stars shows intriguing differences to predictions from models of synthetic stellar populations in the Galaxy.

362 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Modules for Experiments in Stellar Astrophysics (MESA) as discussed by the authors is an open source software package for modeling the evolution of stellar structures and composition. But it is not suitable for large-scale systems such as supernovae.
Abstract: We substantially update the capabilities of the open source software package Modules for Experiments in Stellar Astrophysics (MESA), and its one-dimensional stellar evolution module, MESA star. Improvements in MESA star's ability to model the evolution of giant planets now extends its applicability down to masses as low as one-tenth that of Jupiter. The dramatic improvement in asteroseismology enabled by the space-based Kepler and CoRoT missions motivates our full coupling of the ADIPLS adiabatic pulsation code with MESA star. This also motivates a numerical recasting of the Ledoux criterion that is more easily implemented when many nuclei are present at non-negligible abundances. This impacts the way in which MESA star calculates semi-convective and thermohaline mixing. We exhibit the evolution of 3-8 M ? stars through the end of core He burning, the onset of He thermal pulses, and arrival on the white dwarf cooling sequence. We implement diffusion of angular momentum and chemical abundances that enable calculations of rotating-star models, which we compare thoroughly with earlier work. We introduce a new treatment of radiation-dominated envelopes that allows the uninterrupted evolution of massive stars to core collapse. This enables the generation of new sets of supernovae, long gamma-ray burst, and pair-instability progenitor models. We substantially modify the way in which MESA star solves the fully coupled stellar structure and composition equations, and we show how this has improved the scaling of MESA's calculational speed on multi-core processors. Updates to the modules for equation of state, opacity, nuclear reaction rates, and atmospheric boundary conditions are also provided. We describe the MESA Software Development Kit that packages all the required components needed to form a unified, maintained, and well-validated build environment for MESA. We also highlight a few tools developed by the community for rapid visualization of MESA star results.

2,761 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) as discussed by the authors will search for planets transiting bright and nearby stars using four wide-field optical charge-coupled device cameras to monitor at least 200,000 main-sequence dwarf stars.
Abstract: The Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) will search for planets transiting bright and nearby stars. TESS has been selected by NASA for launch in 2017 as an Astrophysics Explorer mission. The spacecraft will be placed into a highly elliptical 13.7-day orbit around the Earth. During its 2-year mission, TESS will employ four wide-field optical charge-coupled device cameras to monitor at least 200,000 main-sequence dwarf stars with I C ≈4−13 for temporary drops in brightness caused by planetary transits. Each star will be observed for an interval ranging from 1 month to 1 year, depending mainly on the star’s ecliptic latitude. The longest observing intervals will be for stars near the ecliptic poles, which are the optimal locations for follow-up observations with the James Webb Space Telescope. Brightness measurements of preselected target stars will be recorded every 2 min, and full frame images will be recorded every 30 min. TESS stars will be 10 to 100 times brighter than those surveyed by the pioneering Kepler mission. This will make TESS planets easier to characterize with follow-up observations. TESS is expected to find more than a thousand planets smaller than Neptune, including dozens that are comparable in size to the Earth. Public data releases will occur every 4 months, inviting immediate community-wide efforts to study the new planets. The TESS legacy will be a catalog of the nearest and brightest stars hosting transiting planets, which will endure as highly favorable targets for detailed investigations.

2,604 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Modules for Experiments in Stellar Astrophysics (MESA) as discussed by the authors can now simultaneously evolve an interacting pair of differentially rotating stars undergoing transfer and loss of mass and angular momentum, greatly enhancing the prior ability to model binary evolution.
Abstract: We substantially update the capabilities of the open-source software instrument Modules for Experiments in Stellar Astrophysics (MESA). MESA can now simultaneously evolve an interacting pair of differentially rotating stars undergoing transfer and loss of mass and angular momentum, greatly enhancing the prior ability to model binary evolution. New MESA capabilities in fully coupled calculation of nuclear networks with hundreds of isotopes now allow MESA to accurately simulate advanced burning stages needed to construct supernova progenitor models. Implicit hydrodynamics with shocks can now be treated with MESA, enabling modeling of the entire massive star lifecycle, from pre-main sequence evolution to the onset of core collapse and nucleosynthesis from the resulting explosion. Coupling of the GYRE non-adiabatic pulsation instrument with MESA allows for new explorations of the instability strips for massive stars while also accelerating the astrophysical use of asteroseismology data. We improve treatment of mass accretion, giving more accurate and robust near-surface profiles. A new MESA capability to calculate weak reaction rates "on-the-fly" from input nuclear data allows better simulation of accretion induced collapse of massive white dwarfs and the fate of some massive stars. We discuss the ongoing challenge of chemical diffusion in the strongly coupled plasma regime, and exhibit improvements in MESA that now allow for the simulation of radiative levitation of heavy elements in hot stars. We close by noting that the MESA software infrastructure provides bit-for-bit consistency for all results across all the supported platforms, a profound enabling capability for accelerating MESA's development.

2,166 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) as mentioned in this paper was selected by NASA for launch in 2017 as an Astrophysics Explorer mission to search for planets transiting bright and nearby stars.
Abstract: The Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) will search for planets transiting bright and nearby stars. TESS has been selected by NASA for launch in 2017 as an Astrophysics Explorer mission. The spacecraft will be placed into a highly elliptical 13.7-day orbit around the Earth. During its two-year mission, TESS will employ four wide-field optical CCD cameras to monitor at least 200,000 main-sequence dwarf stars with I = 4-13 for temporary drops in brightness caused by planetary transits. Each star will be observed for an interval ranging from one month to one year, depending mainly on the star's ecliptic latitude. The longest observing intervals will be for stars near the ecliptic poles, which are the optimal locations for follow-up observations with the James Webb Space Telescope. Brightness measurements of preselected target stars will be recorded every 2 min, and full frame images will be recorded every 30 min. TESS stars will be 10-100 times brighter than those surveyed by the pioneering Kepler mission. This will make TESS planets easier to characterize with follow-up observations. TESS is expected to find more than a thousand planets smaller than Neptune, including dozens that are comparable in size to the Earth. Public data releases will occur every four months, inviting immediate community-wide efforts to study the new planets. The TESS legacy will be a catalog of the nearest and brightest stars hosting transiting planets, which will endure as highly favorable targets for detailed investigations.

1,728 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Modules for Experiments in Stellar Astrophysics (MESA) as discussed by the authors can now simultaneously evolve an interacting pair of differentially rotating stars undergoing transfer and loss of mass and angular momentum, greatly enhancing the prior ability to model binary evolution.
Abstract: We substantially update the capabilities of the open-source software instrument Modules for Experiments in Stellar Astrophysics (MESA). MESA can now simultaneously evolve an interacting pair of differentially rotating stars undergoing transfer and loss of mass and angular momentum, greatly enhancing the prior ability to model binary evolution. New MESA capabilities in fully coupled calculation of nuclear networks with hundreds of isotopes now allow MESA to accurately simulate advanced burning stages needed to construct supernova progenitor models. Implicit hydrodynamics with shocks can now be treated with MESA, enabling modeling of the entire massive star lifecycle, from pre-main sequence evolution to the onset of core collapse and nucleosynthesis from the resulting explosion. Coupling of the GYRE non-adiabatic pulsation instrument with MESA allows for new explorations of the instability strips for massive stars while also accelerating the astrophysical use of asteroseismology data. We improve treatment of mass accretion, giving more accurate and robust near-surface profiles. A new MESA capability to calculate weak reaction rates "on-the-fly" from input nuclear data allows better simulation of accretion induced collapse of massive white dwarfs and the fate of some massive stars. We discuss the ongoing challenge of chemical diffusion in the strongly coupled plasma regime, and exhibit improvements in MESA that now allow for the simulation of radiative levitation of heavy elements in hot stars. We close by noting that the MESA software infrastructure provides bit-for-bit consistency for all results across all the supported platforms, a profound enabling capability for accelerating MESA's development.

1,401 citations