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Published February 2016 | Published + Submitted
Journal Article Open

Spectroscopic Survey of G and K Dwarfs in the Hipparcos Catalog. I. Comparison between the Hipparcos and Photometric Parallaxes

Abstract

The tension between the Hipparcos parallax of the Pleiades and other independent distance estimates continues even after the new reduction of the Hipparcos astrometric data and the development of a new geometric distance measurement for the cluster. A short Pleiades distance from the Hipparcos parallax predicts a number of stars in the solar neighborhood that are sub-luminous at a given photospheric abundance. We test this hypothesis using the spectroscopic abundances for a subset of stars in the Hipparcos catalog, which occupy the same region as the Pleiades in the color–magnitude diagram. We derive stellar parameters for 170 nearby G- and K-type field dwarfs in the Hipparcos catalog based on high-resolution spectra obtained using KPNO 4 m echelle spectrograph. Our analysis shows that, when the Hipparcos parallaxes are adopted, most of our sample stars follow empirical color–magnitude relations. A small fraction of stars are too faint compared to main-sequence fitting relations by ΔM_V ≳ 0.3 mag, but the differences are marginal at a 2σ level, partly due to relatively large parallax errors. On the other hand, we find that the photometric distances of stars showing signatures of youth as determined from lithium absorption line strengths and R_(HK)^' chromospheric activity indices are consistent with the Hipparcos parallaxes. Our result is contradictory to a suggestion that the Pleiades distance from main-sequence fitting is significantly altered by stellar activity and/or the young age of its stars, and provides an additional supporting evidence for the long-distance scale of the Pleiades.

Additional Information

© 2016 The American Astronomical Society. Received 2015 October 8; accepted 2016 January 6; published 2016 February 10. We thank an anonymous referee for various suggestions, which helped to improve the readability of the manuscript. We thank Courtney Epstein for her assistance in the observations. B.K. and D.A. acknowledge support provided by the National Research Foundation of Korea to the Center for Galaxy Evolution Research (No. 2010-0027910) and by Basic Science Research Program through the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) funded by the Ministry of Education (2010-0025122, 2015R1D1A1A09058700). This work has developed from a master's thesis conducted by B.K. under the supervision of D.A. at Ewha Womans University. J.R.S. gratefully acknowledges funding support from NASA Kepler grant NNX1AV62G. Y.S.L. acknowledges support provided by the National Research Foundation of Korea to the Center for Galaxy Evolution Research (No. 2010-0027910) and the Basic Science Research Program through the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) funded by the Ministry of Science, ICT & Future Planning (NRF-2015R1C1A1A02036658). D.M.T. acknowledges support from award AST-1411685 from the National Science Foundation to The Ohio State University. This research has made use of the NASA Star and Exoplanet Database (NStED), which was operated until 2011 by the California Institute of Technology, under contract with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. This research has made use of the SIMBAD database, operated at CDS, Strasbourg, France.

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Published - apjs_222_2_19.pdf

Submitted - 1601.01459v1.pdf

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Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 18, 2023