The Penn State-Torun Centre for Astronomy Planet Search stars. I. Spectroscopic analysis of 348 red giants
P. Zielinski (1), A. Niedzielski (1), A. Wolszczan (2,3), M. Adamow, (1), G. Nowak (1) ((1) Torun Centre for Astronomy, Nicolaus Copernicus, University, (2) Department of Astronomy, Astrophysics, PennState, University, (3) Center for Exoplanets, Habitable Worlds, PennState

TL;DR
This study provides detailed spectroscopic parameters for 348 giant stars, aiding the understanding of low-mass companions and stellar evolution around evolved stars, using a strictly LTE-based analysis of high-resolution spectra.
Contribution
First comprehensive spectroscopic analysis of 348 giants from the Penn State-Torun survey, establishing a basis for statistical studies of low-mass companions.
Findings
Sample stars have Teff 4055-6239 K and logg 1.39-4.78
Stars are generally less metal-rich than the Sun with median [Fe/H] = -0.15
Stellar parameters have uncertainties comparable to other studies
Abstract
We present basic atmospheric parameters (Teff, logg, vt and [Fe/H]) as well as luminosities, masses, radii and absolute radial velocities for 348 stars, presumably giants, from the ~1000 star sample observed within the Penn State-Torun Centre for Astronomy Planet Search with the High Resolution Spectrograph of the 9.2m Hobby-Eberly Telescope. The stellar parameters are key ingredients in proper interpretation of newly discovered low-mass companions while a systematic study of the complete sample will create a basis for future statistical considerations concerning low-mass companions appearance around evolved low and intermediate-mass stars. The atmospheric parameters were derived using a strictly spectroscopic method based on the LTE analysis of equivalent widths of FeI and FeII lines. With existing photometric data and the Hipparcos parallaxes we estimated stellar masses and ages via…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
