- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJS/233/23
- Title:
- APOKASC catalog of KIC dwarfs and subgiants
- Short Name:
- J/ApJS/233/23
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present the first APOKASC catalog of spectroscopic and asteroseismic data for dwarfs and subgiants. Asteroseismic data for our sample of 415 objects have been obtained by the Kepler mission in short (58.5s) cadence, and light curves span from 30 up to more than 1000 days. The spectroscopic parameters are based on spectra taken as part of the Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE) and correspond to Data Release 13 of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. We analyze our data using two independent T_eff_ scales, the spectroscopic values from DR13 and those derived from SDSS griz photometry. We use the differences in our results arising from these choices as a test of systematic temperature uncertainties and find that they can lead to significant differences in the derived stellar properties. Determinations of surface gravity (logg), mean density (<{rho}>), radius (R), mass (M), and age ({tau}) for the whole sample have been carried out by means of (stellar) grid-based modeling. We have thoroughly assessed random and systematic error sources in the spectroscopic and asteroseismic data, as well as in the grid-based modeling determination of the stellar quantities provided in the catalog. We provide stellar properties determined for each of the two T_eff_ scales. The median combined (random and systematic) uncertainties are 2% (0.01dex; logg), 3.4% (<{rho}>), 2.6% (R), 5.1% (M), and 19% ({tau}) for the photometric T_eff_ scale and 2% (logg), 3.5% (<{rho}>), 2.7% (R), 6.3% (M), and 23% ({tau}) for the spectroscopic scale.
Number of results to display per page
Search Results
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/453/3474
- Title:
- ASAS, NSVS, and LINEAR detached eclipsing binaries
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/453/3474
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- Eclipsing binaries provide a unique opportunity to measure fundamental properties of stars. With the advent of all-sky surveys, thousands of eclipsing binaries have been reported, yet their light curves are not fully exploited. The goal of this work is to make use of the eclipsing binary light curves delivered by all-sky surveys. We attempt to extract physical parameters of the binary systems from their light curves and colour. Inspired by the work of Devor et al., we use the Detached Eclipsing Binary Light curve fitter (DEBIL) and the Method for Eclipsing Component Identification (MECI) to derive basic properties of the binary systems reported by the All Sky Automated Survey, the Northern Sky Variability Survey, and the Lincoln Near Earth Asteroids Research. We derive the mass, fractional radius, and age for 783 binary systems. We report a subsample of eccentric systems and compare their properties to the tidal circularization theory. With MECI, we are able to estimate the distance of the eclipsing binary systems and use them to probe the structure of the Milky Way. Following the approach of Devor et al., we demonstrate that DEBIL and MECI are instrumental to investigate eclipsing binary light curves in the era of all-sky surveys, and provide estimates of stellar parameters of both binary components without spectroscopic information.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/749/152
- Title:
- Asteroseismic analysis of 22 solar-type stars
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/749/152
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- Asteroseismology with the Kepler space telescope is providing not only an improved characterization of exoplanets and their host stars, but also a new window on stellar structure and evolution for the large sample of solar-type stars in the field. We perform a uniform analysis of 22 of the brightest asteroseismic targets with the highest signal-to-noise ratio observed for 1 month each during the first year of the mission, and we quantify the precision and relative accuracy of asteroseismic determinations of the stellar radius, mass, and age that are possible using various methods. We present the properties of each star in the sample derived from an automated analysis of the individual oscillation frequencies and other observational constraints using the Asteroseismic Modeling Portal (AMP), and we compare them to the results of model-grid-based methods that fit the global oscillation properties. We find that fitting the individual frequencies typically yields asteroseismic radii and masses to ~1% precision, and ages to ~2.5% precision (respectively, 2, 5, and 8 times better than fitting the global oscillation properties). The absolute level of agreement between the results from different approaches is also encouraging, with model-grid-based methods yielding slightly smaller estimates of the radius and mass and slightly older values for the stellar age relative to AMP, which computes a large number of dedicated models for each star. The sample of targets for which this type of analysis is possible will grow as longer data sets are obtained during the remainder of the mission.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJS/210/1
- Title:
- Asteroseismic study of solar-type stars
- Short Name:
- J/ApJS/210/1
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We use asteroseismic data obtained by the NASA Kepler mission to estimate the fundamental properties of more than 500 main-sequence and sub-giant stars. Data obtained during the first 10 months of Kepler science operations were used for this work, when these solar-type targets were observed for one month each in survey mode. Stellar properties have been estimated using two global asteroseismic parameters and complementary photometric and spectroscopic data. Homogeneous sets of effective temperatures, T_eff_, were available for the entire ensemble from complementary photometry; spectroscopic estimates of T_eff_ and [Fe/H] were available from a homogeneous analysis of ground-based data on a subset of 87 stars. We adopt a grid-based analysis, coupling six pipeline codes to 11 stellar evolutionary grids. Through use of these different grid-pipeline combinations we allow implicitly for the impact on the results of stellar model dependencies from commonly used grids, and differences in adopted pipeline methodologies. By using just two global parameters as the seismic inputs we are able to perform a homogeneous analysis of all solar-type stars in the asteroseismic cohort, including many targets for which it would not be possible to provide robust estimates of individual oscillation frequencies (due to a combination of low signal-to-noise ratio and short dataset lengths). The median final quoted uncertainties from consolidation of the grid-based analyses are for the full ensemble (spectroscopic subset) approximately 10.8% (5.4%) in mass, 4.4% (2.2%) in radius, 0.017 dex (0.010 dex) in log g, and 4.3% (2.8%) in mean density. Around 36% (57%) of the stars have final age uncertainties smaller than 1 Gyr. These ages will be useful for ensemble studies, but should be treated carefully on a star-by-star basis. Future analyses using individual oscillation frequencies will offer significant improvements on up to 150 stars, in particular for estimates of the ages, where having the individual frequency data is most important.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/804/146
- Title:
- Atmospheric parameters for nearby B-F stars
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/804/146
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- Age determination is undertaken for nearby early type (BAF) stars, which constitute attractive targets for high-contrast debris disk and planet imaging surveys. Our analysis sequence consists of acquisition of ubvy{beta} photometry from catalogs, correction for the effects of extinction, interpolation of the photometry onto model atmosphere grids from which atmospheric parameters are determined, and finally, comparison to the theoretical isochrones from pre-main sequence through post-main sequence stellar evolution models, accounting for the effects of stellar rotation. We calibrate and validate our methods at the atmospheric parameter stage by comparing our results to fundamentally determined T_eff_ and log g values. We validate and test our methods at the evolutionary model stage by comparing our results on ages to the accepted ages of several benchmark open clusters (IC2602, {alpha} Persei, Pleiades, Hyades). Finally, we apply our methods to estimate stellar ages for 3493 field stars, including several with directly imaged exoplanet candidates.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/783/121
- Title:
- BANYAN II. Nearby young assoc. candidate members
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/783/121
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present Bayesian Analysis for Nearby Young AssociatioNs II (BANYAN II), a modified Bayesian analysis for assessing the membership of later-than-M5 objects to any of several Nearby Young Associations (NYAs). In addition to using kinematic information (from sky position and proper motion), this analysis exploits 2MASS-WISE color-magnitude diagrams in which old and young objects follow distinct sequences. As an improvement over our earlier work (Malo+, 2013, J/ApJ/762/88), the spatial and kinematic distributions for each association are now modeled as ellipsoids whose axes need not be aligned with the Galactic coordinate axes, and we use prior probabilities matching the expected populations of the NYAs considered versus field stars. We present an extensive contamination analysis to characterize the performance of our new method. We find that Bayesian probabilities are generally representative of contamination rates, except when a parallax measurement is considered. In this case contamination rates become significantly smaller and hence Bayesian probabilities for NYA memberships are pessimistic. We apply this new algorithm to a sample of 158 objects from the literature that are either known to display spectroscopic signs of youth or have unusually red near-infrared colors for their spectral type. Based on our analysis, we identify 25 objects as new highly probable candidates to NYAs, including a new M7.5 bona fide member to Tucana-Horologium, making it the latest-type member. In addition, we reveal that a known L2{gamma} dwarf is co-moving with a bright M5 dwarf, and we show for the first time that two of the currently known ultra red L dwarfs are strong candidates to the AB Doradus moving group. Several objects identified here as highly probable members to NYAs could be free-floating planetary-mass objects if their membership is confirmed.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJS/219/33
- Title:
- BANYAN. VII. Candidate YMG members from BASS
- Short Name:
- J/ApJS/219/33
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present the results of a near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopic follow-up survey of 182 M4-L7 low-mass stars and brown dwarfs (BDs) from the BANYAN All-Sky Survey (BASS) for candidate members of nearby, young moving groups (YMGs). We confirm signs of low gravity for 42 new BD discoveries with estimated masses between 8 and 75M_Jup_ and identify previously unrecognized signs of low gravity for 24 known BDs. We refine the fraction of low-gravity dwarfs in the high-probability BASS sample to ~82%. We use this unique sample of 66 young BDs, supplemented with 22 young BDs from the literature, to construct new empirical NIR absolute magnitude and color sequences for low-gravity BDs. We show that low-resolution NIR spectroscopy alone cannot differentiate between the ages of YMGs younger than ~120Myr, and that the BT-Settl atmosphere models do not reproduce well the dust clouds in field or low-gravity L-type dwarfs. We obtain a spectroscopic confirmation of low gravity for 2MASS J14252798-3650229, which is a new ~27M_Jup_, L4 {gamma} bona fide member of AB Doradus. We identify a total of 19 new low-gravity candidate members of YMGs with estimated masses below 13M_Jup_, 7 of which have kinematically estimated distances within 40pc. These objects will be valuable benchmarks for a detailed atmospheric characterization of planetary-mass objects with the next generation of instruments. We find 16 strong candidate members of the Tucana-Horologium association with estimated masses between 12.5 and 14M_Jup_, a regime where our study was particularly sensitive. This would indicate that for this association there is at least one isolated object in this mass range for every 17.5_-5.0_^+6.6^ main-sequence stellar member, a number significantly higher than expected based on standard log-normal initial mass function, however, in the absence of radial velocity and parallax measurements for all of them, it is likely that this over-density is caused by a number of young interlopers from other associations.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/745/147
- Title:
- Binaries among debris disk stars
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/745/147
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We have gathered a sample of 112 main-sequence stars with known debris disks. We collected published information and performed adaptive optics observations at Lick Observatory to determine if these debris disks are associated with binary or multiple stars. We discovered a previously unknown M-star companion to HD 1051 at a projected separation of 628 AU. We found that 25%+/-4% of our debris disk systems are binary or triple star systems, substantially less than the expected ~50%. The period distribution for these suggests a relative lack of systems with 1-100 AU separations. Only a few systems have blackbody disk radii comparable to the binary/triple separation. Together, these two characteristics suggest that binaries with intermediate separations of 1-100 AU readily clear out their disks. We find that the fractional disk luminosity, as a proxy for disk mass, is generally lower for multiple systems than for single stars at any given age. Hence, for a binary to possess a disk (or form planets) it must either be a very widely separated binary with disk particles orbiting a single star or it must be a small separation binary with a circumbinary disk.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/379/162
- Title:
- Binaries with post-T Tauri secondaries
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/379/162
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- File table2 contains the values of the color indices: (b-y), m1, c1, H{beta}, from the Stroemgren photometry and the observational errors on these indices as given by the Hauck and Mermiliod (1998, Cat. <II/215>). The values of Teff and logg are obtained from the Moon & Dworetsky (1985MNRAS.217..305M) calibration to which we have implemented the corrections by Castelli (1991A&A...251..106C). The errors on the parameters Teff and logg, as explained in section 3.3, are the consequence of the observational error on the photometric indices; SigmaTeff is the total error, on Teff, computed as explained in section 3.3. File table5 contains the values of the parallax, the error on the parallax, the Teff and the luminosity for the early-type star and late type star of each visual binary system. The errors on the Teff and on the luminosity are taken into account to compute for each of these parameters its minimum and maximum value. File table7 gives the values of the ages and masses computed for the early-type stars from the Schaller et al. (1993, Cat. <J/A+AS/96/269>) isochrones and Meynet at al. (1993A&AS...98..477M) models and from the Girardi et al. (2000, Cat. <J/A+AS/141/371>) models. The errors on the Teff and the luminosity are used to compute the minimum and the maximum values for the age and the mass. The last two columns concern only the primary stars with a Teff greater than 15000K for which we also compute the age and the mass using as Teff value: (Teff-500K); 500K corresponds to the systematic shift between Teff derived by using different photometric system (see Sect. 3.3). File table9 gives the values of the ages and masses computed for the late-type components from the isochrones and evolutionary tracks by D'Antona et al. (1998, web page, http://www.mporzio.astro.it/~dantona/ ) Palla and Stahler (1999ApJ...525..772P), Siess et al. (2000A&A...358..593S) and Tout et al. (1999MNRAS.310..360T). When possible, the minimum and the maximum values of these parameters are given by taking into account the errors on the Teff and on the luminosity.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJS/244/43
- Title:
- Binary stars parameters from LAMOST & Kepler obs.
- Short Name:
- J/ApJS/244/43
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The parameter distribution of binaries is a fundamental knowledge of the stellar systems. A statistical study on the binary stars is carried out based on the LAMOST spectral and Kepler photometric database. We presented a catalog of 1320 binary stars with plentiful parameters, including period, binary subtype, atmosphere parameters (Teff, [Fe/H], and logg), and the physical properties, such as mass, radius, and age, for the primary component stars. Based on this catalog, the unbiased distribution, rather than the observed distribution, was obtained after the correction of selection biases by the Monte Carlo method considering comprehensive affecting factors. For the first time, the orbital eccentricity distribution of the detached binaries is presented. The distribution differences between the three subtypes of binaries (detached, semidetached, and contact) are demonstrated, which can be explained by the generally accepted evolutional scenarios. Many characteristics of the binary stars, such as huge mass transfer on semidetached binaries, period cutoff on contact binaries, period-temperature relationship of contact binaries, and the evolved binaries, are reviewed by the new database. This work supports a common evolutionary scenario for all subtypes of binary stars.