A Spectroscopic Catalog of the Brightest (J<9) M Dwarfs in the Northern Sky
Sebastien Lepine, Eric J. Hilton, Andrew W. Mann, Matthew Wilde,, Barbara Rojas-Ayala, Kelle L. Cruz, and Eric Gaidos

TL;DR
This paper provides a comprehensive spectroscopic catalog of the brightest northern M dwarfs (J<9), including spectral classification, metallicity estimates, and distance measurements, significantly expanding the known sample for exoplanet research.
Contribution
It presents the first large-scale, systematically calibrated spectroscopic catalog of bright northern M dwarfs, improving classification accuracy and metallicity estimation methods.
Findings
Confirmed 1,408 M dwarfs with spectral subtypes K7-M6.
Achieved half-subtype classification precision after calibration.
Estimated metallicities with +/-0.5 to +/-0.2 dex accuracy.
Abstract
We present a spectroscopic catalog of the 1,564 brightest (J<9) M dwarf candidates in the northern sky, as selected from the SUPERBLINK proper motion catalog. Observations confirm 1,408 of the candidates to be late-K and M dwarfs with spectral subtypes K7-M6. From the low \mu>40 mas/yr proper motion limit and high level of completeness of the SUPERBLINK catalog in that magnitude range, we estimate that our spectroscopic census most likely includes >90% of all existing, northern-sky M dwarfs with apparent magnitude J<9. Only 682 stars in our sample are listed in the Third Catalog of Nearby Stars (CNS3); most others are relative unknowns and have spectroscopic data presented here for the first time. Spectral subtypes are assigned based on spectral index measurements of CaH and TiO molecular bands. A comparison of spectra from the same stars obtained at different observatories however…
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