Bibcode
Niedzielski, A.; Deka-Szymankiewicz, B.; Adamczyk, M.; Adamów, M.; Nowak, G.; Wolszczan, A.
Referencia bibliográfica
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 585, id.A73, 14 pp.
Fecha de publicación:
1
2016
Revista
Número de citas
25
Número de citas referidas
23
Descripción
Aims: We present the complete spectroscopic analysis of 455 stars
observed within the Penn State - Toruń Centre for Astronomy
Planet Search (PTPS) with the High Resolution Spectrograph of the 9.2 m
Hobby-Eberly Telescope. We also present the total sample of 744 evolved
stars of the PTPS and discuss masses of stellar hosts in our and other
surveys devoted to evolved planetary systems. Methods: Stellar
atmospheric parameters were determined through a strictly spectroscopic
LTE analysis of equivalent widths of Fe I and Fe II lines. Rotational
velocities were obtained from fitting synthetic spectra. Radial
velocities were obtained from fitting a Gaussian function to the
cross-correlation function. We determined stellar masses, ages, and
luminosities with a Bayesian analysis of theoretical isochrones. The
radii were calculated either from derived masses and log g or from
Teff and luminosities. Results: We present basic
atmospheric parameters (Teff, log g, vt and
[Fe/H]), rotation velocities, and absolute radial velocities as well as
luminosities, masses, ages and radii for 402 stars (including 11
single-line spectroscopic binaries) that are mostly subgiants and
giants. For 272 of them we present parameters for the first time. For
another 53 stars we present estimates of Teff and log g based
on photometric calibrations. More than half of the objects were found to
be subgiants, but there is also a large group of giants, and a few stars
appear to be dwarfs. The results show that the sample is composed of
stars with masses ranging from 0.52 to 3.21 M⊙, 17 of
which have masses ≥2.0 M⊙. The stellar radii range
from 0.66 to 36.04 R⊙, with the vast majority having
radii between 2.0 and 4.0 R⊙. They are generally less
metal abundant than the Sun with a median [ Fe/H ] = -0.07. For 62 stars
that we have in common with other planet searches, the stellar
atmospheric parameters we found agree very well. We also present basic
properties of the complete list of 744 stars that form the PTPS sample
of evolved stars. We examined stellar masses for 1255 stars in five
other planet searches and found that some of them are probably
significantly overestimated. From applying our uniformly determined
stellar masses, we confirm the apparent increase of companion masses for
evolved stars, and we explain this as well as the lack of close-in
planets with the limited effective radial velocity precision for these
stars that is due to their activity.
Based on observations obtained with the Hobby-Eberly Telescope, which is
a joint project of the University of Texas at Austin, the Pennsylvania
State University, Stanford University,
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, and
Georg-August-Universität Göttingen.Tables 1-5 are only
available at the CDS via anonymous ftp to http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr
(ftp://130.79.128.5) or via http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr/viz-bin/qcat?J/A+A/585/A73