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MOCKA ─ A PLATO mock asteroseismic catalogue: Simulations for gravity-mode oscillators

Lookup NU author(s): Dr Dominic BowmanORCiD

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0).


Abstract

Context. With the PLAnetary Transits and Oscillation of stars (PLATO) space mission set for launch in December 2026 by the European Space Agency (ESA), a new photometric legacy and a future of new scientific discoveries await the community. By exploring scientific topics outside of the core science program, the PLATO complementary science program (PLATO-CS) provides a unique opportunity to maximise the scientific yield of the mission.Aims. In this work, we investigate PLATO’s potential for observing pulsating stars across the Hertzsprung–Russell diagram (HRD). This search is distinct from the core science program. Here, we present a PLATO mock asteroseismic catalogue (MOCKA) of intermediate to massive stars as a benchmark to highlight the asteroseismic yield of PLATO-CS in a quantitative way. MOCKA includes simulations of β Cephei, slowly pulsating B (SPB), δ Scuti, γ Doradus, RR Lyrae, Cepheid, hot sub-dwarf, and white dwarf stars. In particular, main sequence gravity (g) mode pulsators are of interest, as some of these stars form an important foundation for the scientific calibration of PLATO. Their pulsation modes primarily probe the radiative region near the convective core boundary, making them unique stellar laboratories for studying the deep internal structure of stars.Methods. MOCKA is based on a magnitude-limited (G ≲ 17) Gaia catalogue. It is a product of realistic end-to-end PlatoSim simulations of stars for the first PLATO pointing field in the southern hemisphere, which will be observed for a minimum duration of two years. Comprising a state-of-the-art hare-and-hound detection exercise, the simulations of this project explore the impact of spacecraft systematics and stellar contamination on the on-board PLATO light curves.Results. We demonstrate, for the first time, PLATO’s ability to detect and recover the oscillation modes for main sequence g-mode pulsators. We show that an abundant spectrum of frequencies is achievable across a wide range of magnitudes and co-pointing PLATO cameras. Within the magnitude-limited regimes simulated in this work (G ≲ 14 for γ Doradus stars and G ≲ 16 for SPB stars), the dominant g-mode frequency was recovered in more than 95% of cases. Furthermore, we find that an increased spacecraft noise budget impacts the recovery of g modes more than the stellar contamination by variable stars.Conclusions. MOCKA helps improve our understanding of the limits of the PLATO mission, as well as to highlight the opportunities to push astrophysics beyond current stellar models. All the data products of this paper are made available to the community for further exploration. The key data products of MOCKA can be found include the magnitude-limited Gaia catalogue of the first PLATO pointing field, together with fully reduced light curves from multi-camera observations for each pulsation class.


Publication metadata

Author(s): Jannsen N, Tkachenko A, Royer P, De Ridder J, Seynaeve D, Aerts C, Aigrain S, Plachy E, Bodi A, Uzundag M, Bowman DM, Fritzewski DJ, IJspeert LW, Li G, Pedersen MG, Vanrespaille M, Van Reeth T

Publication type: Article

Publication status: Published

Journal: Astronomy & Astrophysics

Year: 2025

Volume: 694

Pages: 22

Print publication date: 12/02/2025

Online publication date: 12/02/2025

Acceptance date: 14/12/2024

Date deposited: 07/05/2026

ISSN (print): 0004-6361

ISSN (electronic): 1432-0746

Publisher: EDP Sciences

URL: https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202452811

DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/202452811

Data Access Statement: All data and appendices are available at: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14540810

Notes: Author Accepted Manuscript version was submitted under CC-BY on 13 Dec 2024: https://arxiv.org/abs/2412.10508


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Funding

Funder referenceFunder name
‘SeismoLab’ KKP-137523 Élvonal grant of the Hungarian Research, Development and Innovation Office (NKFIH) and by the NKFIH excellence grant TKP2021NKTA-64.
BELgian federal Science Policy Office (BELSPO) through PRODEX grant PLATO: ZKE2050-01-D01
C.A. and M.V. acknowledge financial support from the European Research Council (ERC) under the Horizon Europe programme (Synergy Grant agreement N◦ 101071505: 4D-STAR)
Flemish Government under the long-term structural Methusalem funding program by means of the project SOUL: Stellar evolution in full glory, grant METH/24/012 at KU Leuven.
Frontier Research grant under the UKgovernment’s ERC Horizon Europe funding guarantee (SYMPHONY; grant number: EP/Y031059/1)
German Aerospace Agency (Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt) under PLATO Data Center grant 50OO1501
M.U. gratefully acknowledges funding from the Research Foundation Flanders (FWO) by means of a junior postdoctoral fellowship (grant agreement No. 1247624N)
Professor Harry Messel Research Fellowship in Physics Endowment, at the University of Sydney
Royal Society University Research Fellowship (URF; grant number: URF\R1\231631)
Research Foundation Flanders (FWO) under grant agreement 1124321N

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