Survey for Distant Solar Twins (SDST) — I. EPIC method for stellar parameter measurement [SSA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2202.06469


Solar twins are stars of key importance to the field of astronomy and offer a multitude of science applications. Only a small number ($\lesssim200$) of solar twins are known today, all of which are relatively close to our Sun ($\lesssim800\,pc$). The goal of our Survey for Distant Solar Twins (SDST) is to identify many more solar twin and solar analogue stars out to much larger distances ($\sim4\,kpc$). In this paper, we present a new method to identify solar twins using relatively low $S/N$, medium resolving power ($R\sim 28{,}000$) spectra that will be typical of such distant targets observed with HERMES on the $3.9\,m$ Anglo-Australian Telescope (AAT). We developed a novel approach, namely EPIC, to measure stellar parameters which we use to identify stars similar to our Sun. EPIC determines the stellar atmospheric parameters (effective temperature $T_{\mathrm{eff}}$, surface gravity $\log g$ and metallicity [Fe/H]) using differential equivalent width (EW) measurements of selected spectroscopic absorption features and a simple model, trained on previously analysed spectra, that connects these EWs to the stellar parameters. The reference for the EW measurements is a high $S/N$ solar spectrum which is used to minimise several systematic effects. EPIC is fast, optimised for Sun-like stars and yields stellar parameter measurements with small enough uncertainties to enable spectroscopic identification of solar twin and analogue stars up to $\sim4\,kpc$ away using AAT/HERMES, i.e.\ $\sigma\left(T_{\mathrm{eff}}, \log g, \textrm{[Fe/H]}\right) = \left(50\,K, 0.08\,dex, 0.03\,dex\right)$ on average at $S/N=25$.

Read this paper on arXiv…

C. Lehmann, M. Murphy, F. Liu, et. al.
Tue, 15 Feb 22
11/75

Comments: Accepted by MNRAS. The current release of the EPIC algorithm is available at this https URL