20 research outputs found

    Detailed chemical analysis of M dwarf stars

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    M dwarf stars are the most abundant stars in the Galaxy and appear to host the vast majority of temperate, Earth-sized planets. Investigations into their detailed compositions are important for inferring the chemical evolution of the Galaxy and for understanding relationships between stellar composition and planet occurrence. However, detailed characterization of M dwarfs is hampered by a unique set of challenges due to their lower effective temperatures. Previous attempts to measure the compositions of M dwarfs relied on observations of M dwarfs with F-, G-, or K-type companions to calibrate metallicity-sensitive features in their near-infrared spectra. These methods are indirect tracers of metallicity, using sodium and calcium lines to estimate iron abundance and overall metallicity. As such, they are not suited for detailed chemical analysis. Utilizing state-of-the-art stellar atmosphere models, I showed that previous M dwarf metallicity calibrations are more sensitive to carbon and oxygen abundances than they are to overall metallicity. By accounting for the effects of carbon and oxygen, I developed the first calibrated method to directly measure the abundances of individual elements in M dwarfs. I showed that the abundances of iron and titanium can be measured directly from iron and titanium lines in high-resolution Y-band spectra. The relative abundance of titanium to iron correlates with stellar age due to the chemical evolution of the Galaxy. I showed that titanium enhancement combined with kinematics can constrain the ages of individual field M dwarfs. I developed a method to measure chemo-kinematic ages of M dwarfs and used it to investigate the tidal evolution of planets on eccentric, short-period orbits around M dwarfs. I found that short-period planets around M dwarfs can maintain non-zero eccentricities for at least 9 Gyr. Detailed chemical analysis of Sun-like stars is now being carried out by the hundreds of thousands thanks to numerous high-resolution spectroscopic surveys at optical wavelengths. In this dissertation, I reviewed current and planned spectroscopic surveys at near-infrared wavelengths that are amenable to M dwarf abundance analysis and presented a case study design of a compact, high-resolution, near-infrared spectrometer for 5-meter class telescopes

    NEWS: the near-infrared Echelle for wideband spectroscopy

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    We present an updated optical and mechanical design of NEWS: the Near-infrared Echelle for Wide-band Spectroscopy (formerly called HiJaK: the High-resolution J, H and K spectrometer), a compact, high-resolution, near-infrared spectrometer for 5-meter class telescopes. NEWS provides a spectral resolution of 60,000 and covers the full 0.8-2.5 micron range in 5 modes. We adopt a compact, lightweight, monolithic design and developed NEWS to be mounted to the instrument cube at the Cassegrain focus of the the new 4.3-meter Discovery Channel Telescope.Comment: Proc. SPIE 9908, Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy VI, 99086M (August 9, 2016

    Chemo-kinematic ages of eccentric-planet-hosting M dwarf stars

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    M dwarf stars are exciting targets for exoplanet investigations; however, their fundamental stellar properties are difficult to measure. Perhaps the most challenging property to measure is stellar age. Once on the main sequence, M dwarfs change imperceptibly in their temperature and luminosity, necessitating novel statistical techniques for estimating their ages. In this paper, we infer ages for known eccentric-planet-hosting M dwarfs using a combination of kinematics and α\alpha-element-enrichment, both shown to correlate with age for Sun-like FGK stars. We calibrate our method on FGK stars in a Bayesian context. To measure α\alpha-enrichment, we use publicly-available spectra from the CARMENES exoplanet survey and a recently developed [Ti/Fe] calibration utilizing individual Ti I and Fe I absorption lines in YY band. Tidal effects are expected to circularize the orbits of short-period planets on short timescales; however, we find a number of mildly eccentric, close-in planets orbiting old (∌\sim8 Gyr) stars. For these systems, we use our ages to constrain the tidal dissipation parameter of the planets, QpQ_\mathrm{p}. For two mini-Neptune planets, GJ 176b and GJ 536b, we find they have QpQ_\mathrm{p} values more similar to the ice giants than the terrestrial planets in our Solar System. For GJ 436b, we estimate an age of 8.9−2.1+2.38.9^{+2.3}_{-2.1} Gyr and constrain the QpQ_\mathrm{p} to be >105>10^5, in good agreement with constraints from its inferred tidal heating. We find that GJ 876d has likely undergone significant orbital evolution over its 8.4−2.0+2.28.4^{+2.2}_{-2.0} Gyr lifetime, potentially influenced by its three outer companions which orbit in a Laplace resonance.Comment: accepted for publication in Ap

    Magnetic inflation and stellar mass. V. Intensification and saturation of M-dwarf absorption lines with Rossby number

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    In young Sun-like stars and field M-dwarf stars, chromospheric and coronal magnetic activity indicators such as Hα, X-ray, and radio emission are known to saturate with low Rossby number (Ro lesssim 0.1), defined as the ratio of rotation period to convective turnover time. The mechanism for the saturation is unclear. In this paper, we use photospheric Ti i and Ca i absorption lines in the Y band to investigate magnetic field strength in M dwarfs for Rossby numbers between 0.01 and 1.0. The equivalent widths of the lines are magnetically enhanced by photospheric spots, a global field, or a combination of the two. The equivalent widths behave qualitatively similar to the chromospheric and coronal indicators: we see increasing equivalent widths (increasing absorption) with decreasing Ro and saturation of the equivalent widths for Ro lesssim 0.1. The majority of M dwarfs in this study are fully convective. The results add to mounting evidence that the magnetic saturation mechanism occurs at or beneath the stellar photosphere.Published versio

    A physically motivated and empirically calibrated method to measure effective temperature, metallicity, and Ti abundance of M dwarfs

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    The ability to perform detailed chemical analysis of Sun-like F-, G-, and K-type stars is a powerful tool with many applications including studying the chemical evolution of the Galaxy and constraining planet formation theories. Unfortunately, complications in modeling cooler stellar atmospheres hinders similar analysis of M-dwarf stars. Empirically-calibrated methods to measure M dwarf metallicity from moderate-resolution spectra are currently limited to measuring overall metallicity and rely on astrophysical abundance correlations in stellar populations. We present a new, empirical calibration of synthetic M dwarf spectra that can be used to infer effective temperature, Fe abundance, and Ti abundance. We obtained high-resolution (R~25,000), Y-band (~1 micron) spectra of 29 M dwarfs with NIRSPEC on Keck II. Using the PHOENIX stellar atmosphere modeling code (version 15.5), we generated a grid of synthetic spectra covering a range of temperatures, metallicities, and alpha-enhancements. From our observed and synthetic spectra, we measured the equivalent widths of multiple Fe I and Ti I lines and a temperature-sensitive index based on the FeH bandhead. We used abundances measured from widely-separated solar-type companions to empirically calibrate transformations to the observed indices and equivalent widths that force agreement with the models. Our calibration achieves precisions in Teff, [Fe/H], and [Ti/Fe] of 60 K, 0.1 dex, and 0.05 dex, respectively and is calibrated for 3200 K < Teff < 4100 K, -0.7 < [Fe/H] < +0.3, and -0.05 < [Ti/Fe] < +0.3. This work is a step toward detailed chemical analysis of M dwarfs at a similar precision achieved for FGK stars.Comment: accepted for publication in ApJ, all synthetic spectra available at http://people.bu.edu/mveyette/phoenix

    Panchromatic Hubble Andromeda Treasury IX: A Photometric Survey of Planetary Nebulae in M31

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    We search Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) and Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) broadband imaging data from the Panchromatic Hubble Andromeda Treasury (PHAT) survey to identify detections of cataloged planetary nebulae (PNe). Of the 711 PNe currently in the literature within the PHAT footprint, we find 467 detected in the broadband. For these 467 we are able to refine their astrometric accuracy from ~0."3 to 0."05. Using the resolution of HST, we are able to show that 152 objects currently in the catalogs are definitively not PNe, and we show that 32 objects thought to be extended in ground-based images are actually point-like and therefore good PN candidates. We also find one PN candidate that is marginally resolved. If this is a PN, it is up to 0.7 pc in diameter. With our new photometric data, we develop a method of measuring the level of excitation in individual PNe by comparing broadband and narrowband imaging and describe the effects of excitation on a PN's photometric signature. Using the photometric properties of the known PNe in the PHAT catalogs, we search for more PN, but do not find any new candidates, suggesting that ground-based emission-line surveys are complete in the PHAT footprint to F475W ≃\simeq 24.Comment: 41 pages, 20 figures, 4 tables, accepted for publication in Ap

    Effects of Telluric Contamination in Iodine-calibrated Precise Radial Velocities

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    We characterized the effects of telluric absorption lines on the radial velocity (RV) precision of stellar spectra taken through an iodine cell. To isolate the effects induced by telluric contamination from other stellar, instrumental, or numerical systematic RV noise, we extracted RVs from simulated iodine-calibrated spectra of three RV standard stars regularly observed by Keck/HIRES. We add in water absorption lines according to measured precipitable water vapor (PWV) contents over a one-year period. We conclude that telluric contamination introduces additional RV noise and spurious periodic signals at the level of 10–20 cm s⁻Âč, consistent with similar previous studies. Our findings show that forward modeling the telluric lines effectively recovers the RV precision and accuracy, with no prior knowledge of the PWV needed. Such a recovery is less effective when the water absorption lines are relatively deep in the stellar template used in the forward modeling. Overall, telluric contamination plays an insignificant role in typical iodine-calibrated RV programs aiming at ~1–2 m s⁻Âč, but we recommend adding modeling of telluric lines and taking stellar template observations on nights with low humidity for programs aiming to achieve a precision of better than 1 m s⁻Âč

    Radii of 88 M subdwarfs and updated radius relations for low-metallicity M-dwarf stars

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    M subdwarfs are low-metallicity M dwarfs that typically inhabit the halo population of the Galaxy. Metallicity controls the opacity of stellar atmospheres; in metal-poor stars, hydrostatic equilibrium is reached at a smaller radius, leading to smaller radii for a given effective temperature. We compile a sample of 88 stars that span spectral classes K7 to M6 and include stars with metallicity classes from solar-metallicity dwarf stars to the lowest metallicity ultra subdwarfs to test how metallicity changes the stellar radius. We fit models to Palomar Double Spectrograph (DBSP) optical spectra to derive effective temperatures (T_ eff) and we measure bolometric luminosities (L_ bol) by combining broad wavelength-coverage photometry with Gaia parallaxes. Radii are then computed by combining the T_ eff and L_ bol using the Stefan–Boltzman law. We find that for a given temperature, ultra subdwarfs can be as much as five times smaller than their solar-metallicity counterparts. We present color-radius and color-surface brightness relations that extend down to [Fe/H] of −2.0 dex, in order to aid the radius determination of M subdwarfs, which will be especially important for the WFIRST exoplanetary microlensing survey.Published versio

    How to select optimal portfolio in #alpha#-stable markets

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