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Sun-like stars undergo a variety of low-level pulsations driven by internal instabilities.
Asteroseismology uses those pulsations to study the internal structure of stars.
Not surprisingly, those oscillations were first discovered in the Sun. In the
early 1960s, Robert Leighton used the 60-foot solar tower on Mt. Wilson to obtain
spectroheliograms of the Sun, narrowband images centred on Zeeman-split lines
that showed the velocity structure across the surface; those data revealed periodic
variations with P~296 seconds, the 5-minute solar oscillations. Detecting such
variations require extemely high signal-to-noise; nonetheless, observations have
been extended to a handful of other stars. In particular, ESA's COROT mission has
detected recently pulsations in three F-type stars.
The present program will use
the Fine Guidance Sensors on HST to measure the pulsational modes in the star HD 17156,
an 8th magnitude G-type subgiant at a distance of ~ 78 parsecs from the Sun.
The crucial characteristic of this star is that it harbours a planetary
system where at least the innermost hot Jupiter, HD 17156b, transits the host star. Those
transits provide a measure of the stellar radius, and hence the mean density.
If multiple pulsational modes are detected with the FGS
then those data will provide an entirely independent measurement of the internal
density structure, and can determine the stellar age to an accuracy of 5-10%.
Identifying those modes requires collecting close to ~1012 (one thousand billion,
or one trillion) photons. To achieve this, HST will take advantage of the fact that
HD 17156 lies in the Continuous Viewing Zone (CVZ) at this time of year, and will
stare exclusively at that star from late on December 21st through to January 1st 2009,
a span of 148 orbits.
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