Bibcode
Queiroz, A. B. A.; Anders, F.; Santiago, B. X.; Chiappini, C.; Steinmetz, M.; Dal Ponte, M.; Stassun, K. G.; da Costa, L. N.; Maia, M. A. G.; Crestani, J.; Beers, T. C.; Fernández-Trincado, J. G.; García-Hernández, D. A.; Roman-Lopes, A.; Zamora, O.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 476, Issue 2, p.2556-2583
Advertised on:
5
2018
Citations
165
Refereed citations
155
Description
Understanding the formation and evolution of our Galaxy requires
accurate distances, ages, and chemistry for large populations of field
stars. Here, we present several updates to our spectrophotometric
distance code, which can now also be used to estimate ages, masses, and
extinctions for individual stars. Given a set of measured
spectrophotometric parameters, we calculate the posterior probability
distribution over a given grid of stellar evolutionary models, using
flexible Galactic stellar-population priors. The code (called StarHorse)
can accommodate different observational data sets, prior options,
partially missing data, and the inclusion of parallax information into
the estimated probabilities. We validate the code using a variety of
simulated stars as well as real stars with parameters determined from
asteroseismology, eclipsing binaries, and isochrone fits to star
clusters. Our main goal in this validation process is to test the
applicability of the code to field stars with known Gaia-like
parallaxes. The typical internal precisions (obtained from realistic
simulations of an APOGEE+Gaia-like sample) are {˜eq } 8 {per cent}
in distance, {˜eq } 20 {per cent} in age, {˜eq } 6 {per
cent} in mass, and ≃ 0.04 mag in AV. The median external
precision (derived from comparisons with earlier work for real stars)
varies with the sample used, but lies in the range of {˜eq } [0,2]
{per cent} for distances, {˜eq } [12,31] {per cent} for ages,
{˜eq } [4,12] {per cent} for masses, and ≃ 0.07 mag for
AV. We provide StarHorse distances and extinctions for the
APOGEE DR14, RAVE DR5, GES DR3, and GALAH DR1 catalogues.
Related projects
Nucleosynthesis and molecular processes in the late stages of Stellar Evolution
Low- to intermediate-mass (M < 8 solar masses, Ms) stars represent the majority of stars in the Cosmos. They finish their lives on the Asymptotic Giant Branch (AGB) - just before they form planetary nebulae (PNe) - where they experience complex nucleosynthetic and molecular processes. AGB stars are important contributors to the enrichment of the
Domingo Aníbal
García Hernández