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Published February 10, 2017 | Submitted + Published
Journal Article Open

Precision Stellar Characterization of FGKM Stars using an Empirical Spectral Library

Abstract

Classification of stars, by comparing their optical spectra to a few dozen spectral standards, has been a workhorse of observational astronomy for more than a century. Here, we extend this technique by compiling a library of optical spectra of 404 touchstone stars observed with Keck/HIRES by the California Planet Search. The spectra have high resolution (R ≈ 60,000), high signal-to-noise ratio (S/N ≈ 150/pixel), and are registered onto a common wavelength scale. The library stars have properties derived from interferometry, asteroseismology, LTE spectral synthesis, and spectrophotometry. To address a lack of well-characterized late-K dwarfs in the literature, we measure stellar radii and temperatures for 23 nearby K dwarfs, using modeling of the spectral energy distribution and Gaia parallaxes. This library represents a uniform data set spanning the spectral types ~M5–F1 (T_(eff) ≈ 3000–7000 K, R_★ ≈ 0.1–16 R ⊙). We also present "Empirical SpecMatch" (SpecMatch-Emp), a tool for parameterizing unknown spectra by comparing them against our spectral library. For FGKM stars, SpecMatch-Emp achieves accuracies of 100 K in effective temperature (T_(eff)), 15% in stellar radius (R_★), and 0.09 dex in metallicity ([Fe/H]). Because the code relies on empirical spectra it performs particularly well for stars ~K4 and later, which are challenging to model with existing spectral synthesizers, reaching accuracies of 70 K in T_(eff), 10% in R_★, and 0.12 dex in [Fe/H]. We also validate the performance of SpecMatch-Emp, finding it to be robust at lower spectral resolution and S/N, enabling the characterization of faint late-type stars. Both the library and stellar characterization code are publicly available.

Additional Information

© 2017 American Astronomical Society. Received 2016 November 23. Accepted 2016 December 30. Published 2017 February 9. We thank Tabetha Boyajian, John Brewer, Debra Fischer, Eric Gaidos, Andrew Howard, Howard Isaacson, Heather Knutson, Andrew Mann, and Geoffrey Marcy for enlightening conversations that improved this manuscript. We thank the many observers who collected the Keck/HIRES data used here including R. Paul Butler, Debra A. Fischer, Benjamin J. Fulton, Andrew W. Howard, Howard Isaacson, John A. Johnson, Geoffrey W. Marcy, Kathryn M. G. Peek, Steven S. Vogt, Lauren M. Weiss, and Jason T. Wright. S.W.Y. acknowledges support through the Caltech Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship program. E.A.P. acknowledges support from a Hubble Fellowship grant HST-HF2-51365.001-A awarded by the Space Telescope Science Institute, which is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc. for NASA under contract NAS 5-26555. This work has made use of data from the European Space Agency (ESA) mission Gaia (http://www.cosmos.esa.int/gaia), processed by the Gaia Data Processing and Analysis Consortium (DPAC, http://www.cosmos.esa.int/web/gaia/dpac/consortium). Funding for the DPAC has been provided by national institutions, in particular the institutions participating in the Gaia Multilateral Agreement. Some of the data presented herein were obtained at the W. M. Keck Observatory, which is operated as a scientific partnership among the California Institute of Technology, the University of California, and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. The Observatory was made possible by the generous financial support of the W. M. Keck Foundation. Finally, the authors wish to recognize and acknowledge the very significant cultural role and reverence that the summit of Maunakea has always had within the indigenous Hawaiian community. We are most fortunate to have the opportunity to conduct observations from this mountain.

Attached Files

Published - Yee_2017_ApJ_836_77.pdf

Submitted - 1701.00922.pdf

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August 19, 2023
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