Signatures of unresolved binaries in stellar spectra: implications for spectral fitting
Abstract
The observable spectrum of an unresolved binary star system is a superposition of two single-star spectra. Even without a detectable velocity offset between the two stellar components, the combined spectrum of a binary system is in general different from that of either component, and fitting it with single-star models may yield inaccurate stellar parameters and abundances. We perform simple experiments with synthetic spectra to investigate the effect of unresolved main-sequence binaries on spectral fitting, modelling spectra similar to those collected by the APOGEE, GALAH and LAMOST surveys. We find that fitting unresolved binaries with single-star models introduces systematic biases in the derived stellar parameters and abundances that are modest but certainly not negligible, with typical systematic errors of 300 K in T_(eff), 0.1 dex in log g and 0.1 dex in [Fe/H] for APOGEE-like spectra of solar-type stars. These biases are smaller for spectra at optical wavelengths than in the near-infrared. We show that biases can be corrected by fitting spectra with a binary model, which adds only two labels to the fit and includes single-star models as a special case. Our model provides a promising new method to constrain the Galactic binary population, including systems with single-epoch spectra and no detectable velocity offset between the two stars.
Additional Information
© 2017 The Authors. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society. We thank the anonymous referee for a helpful report. We thank Eliot Quataert, Chao Liu, David Hogg and Andy Gould for useful conversations and comments. KE-B acknowledges support from the SFB 881 program (A3), a Berkeley Fellowship, a Hellman award for graduate study, and an NSF graduate research fellowship. H-WR received support from the European Research Council under the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (FP 7) ERC Grant Agreement n. [321035]. Y-ST is supported by the Australian Research Council Discovery Program DP160103747. DRW is supported by a fellowship from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. CC acknowledges support from NASA grant NNX15AK14G, NSF grant AST-1313280 and the Packard Foundation.Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 118687
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20230105-893204000.2
- Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG)
- SFB 881
- University of California, Berkeley
- Hellman Fellowship
- NSF Graduate Research Fellowship
- European Research Council (ERC)
- 321035
- Australian Research Council
- DP160103747
- Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
- NASA
- NNX15AK14G
- NSF
- AST-1313280
- David and Lucile Packard Foundation
- Created
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2023-01-20Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2023-01-20Created from EPrint's last_modified field