1,231 research outputs found
On-line determination of stellar atmospheric parameters Teff, log g, [Fe/H] from ELODIE echelle spectra. II - The library of F5 to K7 stars
A library of 211 echelle spectra taken with ELODIE at the Observatoire de
Haute-Provence is presented. It provides a set of spectroscopic standards
covering the full range of gravities and metallicities in the effective
temperature interval [4000 K, 6300 K]. The spectra are straightened, wavelength
calibrated, cleaned of cosmic ray hits, bad pixels and telluric lines. They
cover the spectral range [440 nm, 680 nm] with an instrumental resolution of
42000. For each star, basic data were compiled from the Hipparcos catalogue and
the Hipparcos Input Catalogue. Radial velocities with a precision better than
100 m/s are given. Atmospheric parameters (Teff, log g, [Fe/H]) from the
literature are discussed. Because of scattered determinations in the
bibliography, even for the most well-known stars, these parameters were
adjusted by an iterative process which takes account of common or different
spectral features between the standards, using our homogeneous set of spectra.
Revised values of (Teff, log g, [Fe/H]) are proposed. They are still consistent
with the literature, and also lead to the self-consistency of the library, in
the sense that similar spectra have similar atmospheric parameters. This
adjustment was performed by using step by step a method based on the least
square comparison of carefully prepared spectra, which was originally developed
for the on-line estimation of the atmospheric parameters of faint field stars
(companion paper in the main journal). The spectra and corresponding data will
only be available in electronic form at the CDS (ftp cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr or
http://cdsweb.u-strasbg.fr/Abstract.html).Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in A&A Supplement Serie
The Ages of Stars
The age of an individual star cannot be measured, only estimated through
mostly model-dependent or empirical methods, and no single method works well
for a broad range of stellar types or for a full range in age. This review
presents a summary of the available techniques for age-dating stars and
ensembles of stars, their realms of applicability, and their strengths and
weaknesses. My emphasis is on low-mass stars because they are present from all
epochs of star formation in the Galaxy and because they present both special
opportunities and problems. The ages of open clusters are important for
understanding the limitations of stellar models and for calibrating empirical
age indicators. For individual stars, a hierarchy of quality for the available
age-dating methods is described. Although our present ability to determine the
ages of even the nearest stars is mediocre, the next few years hold great
promise as asteroseismology probes beyond stellar surfaces and starts to
provide precise interior properties of stars and as models continue to improve
when stressed by better observations.Comment: To appear in the 2010 volume of Annual Reviews of Astronomy and
Astrophysics
On the metallicity of the Milky Way thin disc and photometric abundance scales
The mean metallicity of the Milky Way thin disc in the solar neighbourhood is
still a matter of debate, and has recently been subject to upward revision
(Haywood, 2001). Our star sample was drawn from a set of solar neighbourhood
dwarfs with photometric metallicities. In a recent study, Reid (2002) suggests
that our metallicity calibration, based on Geneva photometry, is biased. We
show here that the effect detected by Reid is not a consequence of our adopted
metallicity scale, and we confirm that our findings are robust. On the
contrary, the application to Stromgren photometry of the Schuster & Nissen
metallicity scale is problematic. Systematic discrepancies of about 0.1 to 0.3
dex affect the photometric metallicity determination of metal rich stars, on
the colour interval 0.22< b-y <0.59, i.e including F and G stars. For F stars,
it is shown that this is a consequence of a mismatch between the standard
sequence m_1(b-y) of the Hyades used by Schuster & Nissen to calibrate their
metallicity scale, and the system of Olsen (1993, 1994ab). It means that
although Schuster & Nissen calibration and Olsen photometry are intrinsically
correct, there are mutually incompatible for metal rich, F-type stars. For G
stars, the discrepancy is most probably the continuation of the same problem,
albeit worthen by the lack of spectroscopic calibrating stars. A corrected
calibration is proposed which renders the calibration of Schuster & Nissen
applicable to the catalogues of Olsen. We also give a simpler calibration
referenced to the Hyades sequence, valid over the same color and metallicity
ranges.Comment: 11 pages, 11 figures, accepted in MNRA
Impact of granulation effects on the use of Balmer lines as temperature indicators
Balmer lines serve as important indicators of stellar effective temperatures
in late-type stellar spectra. One of their modelling uncertainties is the
influence of convective flows on their shape. We aim to characterize the
influence of convection on the wings of Balmer lines. We perform a differential
comparison of synthetic Balmer line profiles obtained from 3D hydrodynamical
model atmospheres and 1D hydrostatic standard ones. The model parameters are
appropriate for F,G,K dwarf and subgiant stars of metallicity ranging from
solar to 1/1000 solar. The shape of the Balmer lines predicted by 3D models can
never be exactly reproduced by a 1D model, irrespective of its effective
temperature. We introduce the concept of a 3D temperature correction, as the
effective temperature difference between a 3D model and a 1D model which
provides the closest match to the 3D profile. The temperature correction is
different for the different members of the Balmer series and depends on the
adopted mixing-length parameter in the 1D model. Among the investigated models,
the 3D correction ranges from -300K to +300K. Horizontal temperature
fluctuations tend to reduce the 3D correction. Accurate effective temperatures
cannot be derived from the wings of Balmer lines, unless the effects of
convection are properly accounted for. The 3D models offer a physically well
justified way of doing so. The use of 1D models treating convection with the
mixing-length theory do not appear to be suitable for this purpose. In
particular, there are indications that it is not possible to determine a single
value of the mixing-length parameter which will optimally reproduce the Balmer
lines for any choice of atmospheric parameters.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in A&
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