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The existence of mixed modes in stars is a marker of stellar evolution. Their detection serves for a better determination of stellar age. The goal of this paper is to identify the dipole modes in an automatic manner without human intervention. I use the power spectra obtained by the Kepler mission for the application of the method. I compute asymptotic dipole mode frequencies as a function of coupling factor and dipole period spacing, and other parameters. For each star, I collapse the power in an echelle diagramme aligned onto the monopole and dipole mixed modes. The power at the null frequency is used as a figure of merit. Using a genetic algorithm, I then optimise the figure of merit by adjusting the location of the dipole frequencies in the power spectrum}. Using published frequencies, I compare the asymptotic dipole mode frequencies with published frequencies. I also used published frequencies for deriving coupling factor and dipole period spacing using a non-linear least squares fit. I use Monte-Carlo simulations of the non-linear least square fit for deriving error bars for each parameters. From the 44 subgiants studied, the automatic identification allows to retrieve within 3 $mu$Hz at least 80% of the modes for 32 stars, and within 6 $mu$Hz at least 90% of the modes for 37 stars. The optimised and fitted gravity-mode period spacing and coupling factor agree with previous measurements. Random errors for the mixed-mode parameters deduced from Monte-Carlo simulation are about 30-50 times smaller than previously determined errors, which are in fact systematic errors. The period spacing and coupling factors of mixed modes in subgiants are confirmed. The current automated procedure will need to be improved using a more accurate asymptotic model and/or proper statistical tests.
Since few decades, asteroseismology, the study of stellar oscillations, enables us to probe the interiors of stars with great precision. It allows stringent tests of stellar models and can provide accurate radii, masses and ages for individual stars.
Models of solar-like oscillators yield acoustic modes at different frequencies than would be seen in actual stars possessing identical interior structure, due to modelling error near the surface. This asteroseismic surface term must be corrected when
Seismic observations have shown that a number of evolved stars exhibit low-amplitude dipole modes, which are referred to as depressed modes. Recently, these low amplitudes have been attributed to the presence of a strong magnetic field in the stellar
This study is the first of a series of papers that provide a technique to analyse the mixed-modes frequency spectra and characterise the structure of stars on the subgiant and red-giant branches. We define seismic indicators, relevant of the stellar
Identifying the angular degrees $l$ of oscillation modes is essential for asteroseismology and depends on visual tagging before fitting power spectra in a so-called peakbagging analysis. In oscillating subgiants, radial ($l$= 0) mode frequencies dist