Distance determination for RAVE stars using stellar models II: Most likely values assuming a standard stellar evolution scenario
T. Zwitter (1, 2), G. Matijevi\v{c} (1), M. A. Breddels (3), M. C., Smith (3,4), A. Helmi (3), U. Munari (5), O. Bienaym\'e (6), J. Binney (7),, J. Bland-Hawthorn (8), C. Boeche (9), A. G. A. Brown (10), R. Campbell (11),, K. C. Freeman (12), J. Fulbright (13), B. Gibson (14)

TL;DR
This paper presents a method to determine stellar distances in the RAVE survey using stellar models, achieving accuracy comparable to Hipparcos and enabling studies of Galactic structure.
Contribution
It refines a previous distance estimation method by incorporating multiple isochrone sets, realistic errors, and larger datasets, assuming standard stellar evolution.
Findings
Distances match Hipparcos within ~21%
Repeatability of distances is better than 11% for half of the stars
Dwarfs are ~300 pc away; giants up to 10 kpc
Abstract
The RAdial Velocity Experiment (RAVE) is a spectroscopic survey of the Milky Way. We use the subsample of spectra with spectroscopically determined values of stellar parameters to determine the distances to these stars. The list currently contains 235,064 high quality spectra which show no peculiarities and belong to 210,872 different stars. The numbers will grow as the RAVE survey progresses. The public version of the catalog will be made available through the CDS services along with the ongoing RAVE public data releases. The distances are determined with a method based on the work by Breddels et al.~(2010). Here we assume that the star undergoes a standard stellar evolution and that its spectrum shows no peculiarities. The refinements include: the use of either of the three isochrone sets, a better account of the stellar ages and masses, use of more realistic errors of stellar…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
