143 research outputs found
The spectroscopic indistinguishability of red giant branch and red clump stars
Stellar spectroscopy provides useful information on the physical properties
of stars such as effective temperature, metallicity and surface gravity (log
g). However, those photospheric characteristics are often hampered by
systematic uncertainties. The joint spectro-seismo project (APOKASC) of field
red giants has revealed a puzzling offset between the log g determined
spectroscopically and those determined using asteroseismology, which is largely
dependent on the stellar evolutionary status. Therefore, in this letter, we aim
to shed light on the spectroscopic source of the offset using the APOKASC
sample. We analyse the log g discrepancy as a function of stellar mass and
evolutionary status and discuss the impact of He and carbon isotopic ratio.
We first show that for stars at the bottom of the red giant branch, the
discrepancy between spectroscopic and asteroseismic log g depends on stellar
mass. This indicates that the discrepancy is related to CN cycling. We
demonstrate that the C isotopic ratio () has the largest
impact on the stellar spectrum. We find that this log g discrepancy shows a
similar trend in mass as the ratios expected by stellar
evolution theory. Although we do not detect a direct signature of ,
the data suggests that the discrepancy is tightly correlated to the production
of . Moreover, by running a data-driven algorithm (the Cannon) on a
synthetic grid trained on the APOGEE data, we quantitatively evaluate the
impact of various ratios. While we have demonstrated that
impacts all parameters, the size of the impact is smaller than the
observed offset in log g. If further tests confirm that is not the
main element responsible of the log g problem, the number of spectroscopic
effects remaining to be investigated is now relatively limited. [Abridged]Comment: 4 Pages, 6 Figures. Accepted for publication in A&
Estimation of Nitrogen-to-Iron Abundance Ratios From Low-Resolution Spectra
We present a method to determine nitrogen abundance ratios with respect to
iron ([N/Fe]) from molecular CN-band features observed in low-resolution ( 2000) stellar spectra obtained by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and
the Large Sky Area Multi-Object Fiber Spectroscopic Telescope (LAMOST). Various
tests are carried out to check the systematic and random errors of our
technique, and the impact of signal-to-noise (S/N) ratios of stellar spectra on
the determined [N/Fe]. We find that the uncertainty of our derived [N/Fe] is
less than 0.3 dex for S/N ratios larger than 10 in the ranges =
[4000, 6000] K, log g = [0.0, 3.5], [Fe/H] = [--3.0, 0.0], [C/Fe] = [--1.0,
+4.5], and [N/Fe] = [--1.0, +4.5], the parameter space that we are interested
in to identify N-enhanced stars in the Galactic halo. A star-by-star comparison
with a sample of stars with [N/Fe] estimates available from the Apache Point
Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE) also suggests a similar
level of uncertainty in our measured [N/Fe], after removing its systematic
error. Based on these results, we conclude that our method is able to reproduce
[N/Fe] from low-resolution spectroscopic data, with an uncertainty sufficiently
small to discover N-rich stars that presumably originated from disrupted
Galactic globular clusters.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures, submitted to JKA
Population Studies. XIII. A New Analysis of the Bidelman-MacConnell "Weak-Metal" Stars - Confirmation of Metal-Poor Stars in the Thick Disk of the Galaxy
A new set of very high signal-to-noise (S/N > 100/1), medium-resolution
(R~3000) optical spectra have been obtained for 302 of the candidate
"weak-metal" stars selected by Bidelman & MacConnell. We use these data to
calibrate the recently developed generalization of the SEGUE Stellar Parameter
Pipeline, and obtain estimates of the atmospheric parameters (Teff, log g , and
[Fe/H]) for these non-SDSS/SEGUE data; we also obtain estimates of [C/Fe]. The
new abundance measurements are shown to be consistent with available
high-resolution spectroscopic determinations, and represent a substantial
improvement over the accuracies obtained from the previous photometric
estimates reported in Paper I of this series. The apparent offset in the
photometric abundances of the giants in this sample noted by several authors is
confirmed by our new spectroscopy; no such effect is found for the dwarfs. The
presence of a metal-weak thick-disk (MWTD) population is clearly supported by
these new abundance data. Some 25% of the stars with metallicities -1.8 <
[Fe/H] <= -0.8 exhibit orbital eccentricities e < 0.4, yet are clearly
separated from members of the inner-halo population with similar metallicities
by their location in a Lindblad energy vs. angular momentum diagram. A
comparison is made with recent results for a similar-size sample of RAVE stars
from Ruchti et al. We conclude, based on both of these samples, that the MWTD
is real, and must be accounted for in discussions of the formation and
evolution of the disk system of the Milky Way.Comment: 45 pages, 14 figures; accepted for publication in Ap
Nitrogen depletion in field red giants: mixing during the He flash?
We combine simultaneous constraints on stellar evolutionary status from asteroseismology, and on nitrogen abundances derived from large spectroscopic surveys, to follow nitrogen surface abundances all along the evolution of a low-mass star, comparing model expectations with data. After testing and calibrating the observed yields from the Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE) survey, we first show that nitrogen surface abundances follow the expected trend after the first dredge-up occurred, i.e. that the more massive is the star, the more nitrogen is enhanced. Moreover, the behaviour of nitrogen data along the evolution confirms the existence of non-canonical extramixing on the red giant branch (RGB) for all low-mass stars in the field. But more surprisingly, the data indicate that nitrogen has been depleted between the RGB tip and the red clump. This may suggest that some nitrogen has been burnt near or at the He flash episode.This work was partly supported by the European Union FP7 programme through ERC grant number 320360. NL acknowledges financial support from the Marie Curie Intra-European fellowship (FP7-PEOPLE-2012-IEF) and the CNES postdoctoral fellowship 2016. AM and YE acknowledge the support of the UK Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC). Funding for the Stellar Astrophysics Centre (SAC) is provided by The Danish National Research Foundation (Grant agreement no. DNRF106)
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