16-18 September 2009, Ponte de Lima, Portugal

Motivation

The availability of high-quality ground-based data and new space data (e.g., CoRoT, Kepler) in large volume is driving the development of a diverse range of analysis methods for extracting estimates of the mode parameters in solar-like stars. Some of these methods take their heritage from analyses applied to classical oscillators, others do so from analyses developed for Sun-as-a-star data, while other methods have been developed especially for application to solar-like asteroseismology.

With the current and new solar-like data we have the ability to be able to measure parameters as a function of frequency (including, of course, the mode frequencies themselves). But to what extent do we need to apply a-priori constraints to these analyses to ensure that the results are meaningful and robust? For example, one might choose to demand a certain smoothness of the parameters in frequency. If the a-priori constraints thereby applied are too severe, we risk missing important features in the results; while if the constraints are too weak, we may obtain results whose variation in frequency is unphysical and dominated by systematic limitations of the data and/or analysis.

So, where does a happy medium reside? And how does this change for different classes of star, and different datasets (e.g., quality, length etc.)?

Discussion Points