Bibcode
Sivarani, T.; Beers, T. C.; Lee, Y.; Rockosi, C.; Lai, D.; Yanny, B.; Tucker, D.; Smith, J. A.; Wilhelm, R.; Allende Prieto , C.; Norris, J.; Morrison, H.; Plez, B.
Referencia bibliográfica
American Astronomical Society Meeting 207, #131.13; Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society, Vol. 37, p.1379
Fecha de publicación:
12
2005
Número de citas
2
Número de citas referidas
1
Descripción
We describe an ongoing effort to validate the estimated atmospheric
parameters (Teff, log g, [Fe/H]) obtained from SDSS spectroscopy (R =
2000) and ugriz photometry, which are being employed for both the
previous SDSS-I and the ongoing SEGUE surveys. The spectroscopic
pipeline makes use of a number of methods for the estimation of each
parameter, with estimated internal errors in the order of σ (Teff)
= 150 K, σ (log g) = 0.4 dex, and σ ([Fe/H]) = 0.3 dex.
However, several of these methods rely on an uncertain transformation of
g-r colors to B-V, and there does not presently exist an external
validation of the derived parameters based on high-resolution
spectroscopy. In order to address these deficiencies, we have generated
two new grids of synthetic spectra and ugriz colors (based on both
Kurucz NEWODF models with no covective overshoot and MARCS models) for
stellar atmospheric parameters covering the ranges 3500 K ≤ Teff ≤
10000 K, 0.0 ≤ log g ≤ 5.0, and -5.0 ≤ [Fe/H] ≤ 0.0. The two
grids will provide a useful internal check on the dependence of the
derived parameters on the adopted stellar models. In addition to these
grids, we have also generated a carbon-enriched subgrid, covering the
entire parameter space for various values of carbon enhancement ([C/Fe]
= 0.5,1.0,1.5,2.0). This subgrid makes use of carbon-enhanced MARCS
models instead of scaled solar models, since the atmospheric structures
themselves can be altered by enhanced carbon, especially at cooler
temperatures. The synthetic colors will be calibrated using a selection
of standard stars and open and globular cluster stars covering a wide
range of stellar atmospheric parameters. We have already obtained a
small number of the high-resolution spectra for SDSS stars needed to
calibrate the spectroscopic pipeline; much larger samples of
high-resolution data are presently being acquired.
Preliminarycomparisons of the estimated atmospheric parameters based on
the SDSS/SEGUE spectroscopic pipeline with those derived from the
high-resolution specta will be reported.
T.S., Y.L., and T.C.B. acknowledge partial support from grant AST
04-06784, as well as from grant PHY 02-16783, Physics Frontier
Center/Joint Institute for Nuclear Astrophysics (JINA), awarded by the
US National Science Foundation.