Stellar metallicities beyond the Local Group: the potential of J-band spectroscopy with extremely large telescopes
C. J. Evans (UK ATC), B. Davies, R.-P. Kudritzki, M. Puech, Y. Yang,, J.-G. Cuby, D. F. Figer, M. D Lehnert, S. L. Morris, G. Rousset

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that J-band spectroscopy with the upcoming 42m E-ELT can accurately determine stellar metallicities of red giants and supergiants beyond the Local Group, enabling studies up to tens of Mpc.
Contribution
It introduces a validated method for measuring stellar metallicities using J-band spectroscopy with the E-ELT, extending the reach beyond the Local Volume.
Findings
J-band spectroscopy can recover metallicities within 0.1 dex at S/N > 50.
Potential to measure metallicities of red giants up to 5 Mpc.
Simulations show J-band method outperforms I-band calcium triplet observations.
Abstract
We present simulated J-band spectroscopy of red giants and supergiants with a 42m European Extremely Large Telescope (E-ELT), using tools developed toward the EAGLE Phase A instrument study. The simulated spectra are used to demonstrate the validity of the 1.15-1.22 micron region to recover accurate stellar metallicities from Solar and metal-poor (one tenth Solar) spectral templates. From tests at spectral resolving powers of four and ten thousand, we require continuum signal-to-noise ratios in excess of 50 (per two-pixel resolution element) to recover the input metallicity to within 0.1 dex. We highlight the potential of direct estimates of stellar metallicites (over the range -1<[Fe/H]<0) of red giants with the E-ELT, reaching out to distances of ~5 Mpc for stars near the tip of the red giant branch. The same simulations are also used to illustrate the potential for quantitative…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
