The Influence of Binary Interactions in Infrared passbands of populations
F. Zhang, L. Li, Z. Han

TL;DR
This study models the effects of binary interactions on infrared properties of stellar populations, showing that including binaries alters mass, magnitudes, and colours, with variations depending on metallicity and age.
Contribution
It introduces an improved population synthesis model incorporating binary interactions, providing detailed infrared magnitudes and colours for binary stellar populations.
Findings
Binary interactions reduce stellar mass by ~3.6-4.5% over 15 Gyr.
Magnitudes in infrared bands increase due to binary interactions.
Colours involving infrared bands decrease when binaries are included.
Abstract
In our evolutionary population synthesis models, the samples of binaries are reproduced by the 'patched' Monte Carlo simulation and the stellar masses, integrated J, H, K, L, L2 and M magnitudes, mass-to-light ratios and broad colours involving infrared bands are presented, for an extensive set of instantaneous-burst binary stellar populations. In addition, the fluctuations in the integrated colours, which have been given by Zhang et al. (2005), are reduced. By comparing the results for binary stellar populations with (Model A) and without (Model B) binary interactions we show that the inclusion of binary interactions makes the stellar mass of a binary stellar population smaller (~3.6-4.5% during the past 15Gyr); magnitudes greater (except U, ~0.18mag at the most); colours smaller (~0.15mag for V-K at the most); the mass-to-light ratios greater (~0.06 for K-band) except those in the U…
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