The ability of intermediate-band Stromgren photometry to correctly identify dwarf, subgiant, and giant stars and provide stellar metallicities and surface gravities
Anna S Arnadottir, Sofia Feltzing, Ingemar Lundstrom (Lund, Observatory, Sweden)

TL;DR
This study assesses the effectiveness of intermediate-band Stromgren photometry in accurately identifying stellar types and determining metallicities and surface gravities, comparing it with broad-band photometry and spectroscopic data.
Contribution
It develops new standard sequences for dwarf stars and evaluates calibrations for deriving stellar parameters from Stromgren photometry, enhancing the accuracy of large-scale stellar surveys.
Findings
Stromgren photometry more accurately reproduces spectroscopic metallicities than broad-band photometry.
It better differentiates between dwarf and giant stars.
New standard sequences for dwarf stars were derived.
Abstract
[Abridged] Several large scale photometric and spectroscopic surveys are being undertaken to provide a more detailed picture of the Milky Way. Given the necessity of generalisation in the determination of, e.g., stellar parameters when tens and hundred of thousands of stars are considered it remains important to provide independent, detailed studies to verify the methods used in the surveys. We evaluate available calibrations for deriving [M/H] from Stromgren photometry and develop the standard sequences for dwarf stars to reflect their metallicity dependence and test how well metallicities derived from ugriz photometry reproduce metallicities derived from the well-tested system of Stromgren photometry. We use a catalogue of dwarf stars with both Stromgren uvby photometry and spectroscopically determined iron abundances (in total 451 dwarf stars with 0.3<(b-y)_0<1.0). We also evaluate…
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