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Published May 2015 | Published
Journal Article Open

Observations of Binary Stars with the Differential Speckle Survey Instrument. V. Toward an Empirical Metal-Poor Mass–Luminosity Relation

Abstract

In an effort to better understand the details of the stellar structure and evolution of metal-poor stars, the Gemini North telescope was used on two occasions to take speckle imaging data of a sample of known spectroscopic binary stars and other nearby stars in order to search for and resolve close companions. The observations were obtained using the Differential Speckle Survey Instrument, which takes data in two filters simultaneously. The results presented here are of 90 observations of 23 systems in which one or more companions was detected, and six stars where no companion was detected to the limit of the camera capabilities at Gemini. In the case of the binary and multiple stars, these results are then further analyzed to make first orbit determinations in five cases, and orbit refinements in four other cases. The mass information is derived, and since the systems span a range in metallicity, a study is presented that compares our results with the expected trend in total mass as derived from the most recent Yale isochrones as a function of metal abundance. These data suggest that metal-poor main-sequence stars are less massive at a given color than their solar-metallicity analogues in a manner consistent with that predicted from the theory.

Additional Information

© 2015 The American Astronomical Society. Received 2014 December 5; accepted 2015 March 1; published 2015 April 14. We thank the Kepler Science Office located at the NASA Ames Research Center for providing partial financial support for the upgraded DSSI instrument. It is also a pleasure to thank Steve Hardash, Andy Adamson, Inger Jorgensen, John White, and the entire summit crew for their excellent work in getting the instrument to the telescope and installing it. This work was funded by the Kepler Science Office and NSF grant AST-1429015. It made use of the Washington Double Star Catalog maintained at the U.S. Naval Observatory, the SIMBAD database, operated at CDS, Strasbourg, France, and the 9th Catalog of Spectroscopic Orbits of Binary Stars.

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August 22, 2023
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