Bibcode
Allende Prieto, C.
Referencia bibliográfica
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 595, id.A129, 7 pp.
Fecha de publicación:
11
2016
Revista
Número de citas
8
Número de citas referidas
8
Descripción
Aims: We pose the question of how much information on the
atmospheric parameters of late-type stars can be retrieved purely from
color information using standard photometric systems. Methods: We
carried out numerical experiments using stellar fluxes from model
atmospheres, injecting random noise before analyzing them. We examined
the presence of degeneracies among atmospheric parameters, and evaluated
how well the parameters are extracted depending on the number and
wavelength span of the photometric filters available, from the UV GALEX
to the mid-IR WISE passbands. We also considered spectrophotometry from
the Gaia mission. Results: We find that stellar effective
temperatures can be determined accurately (σ 0.01 dex or about
150 K) when reddening is negligible or known, based merely on optical
photometry, and the accuracy can be improved twofold by including IR
data. On the other hand, stellar metallicities and surface gravities are
fairly unconstrained from optical or IR photometry: 1 dex for both
parameters at low metallicity, and 0.5 dex for [Fe/H] and 1 dex for
log g at high metallicity. However, our ability to retrieve these
parameters can improve significantly by adding UV photometry. When
reddening is considered a free parameter, assuming it can be modeled
perfectly, our experiments suggest that it can be disentangled from the
rest of the parameters. Conclusions: This theoretical study
indicates that combining broad-band photometry from the UV to the mid-IR
allows atmospheric parameters and interstellar extinction to be
determined with fair accuracy, and that the results are moderately
robust to the presence of systematic imperfections in our models of
stellar spectral energy distributions (SEDs). The use of UV passbands
helps substantially to derive metallicities (down to [Fe/H] -3) and
surface gravities, as well as to break the degeneracy between effective
temperature and reddening. The Gaia BP/RP data can disentangle all the
parameters, provided the stellar SEDs are modeled reasonably well.