The expected performance of stellar parametrization with Gaia spectrophotometry
C. Liu (MPIA, Heidelberg), C. A. L. Bailer-Jones (MPIA, Heidelberg),, R. Sordo (INAF, Padova), A. Vallenari (INAF, Padova), R. Borrachero (U., Barcelona), X. Luri (U. Barcelona), P. Sartoretti (Obs Paris)

TL;DR
This paper evaluates the expected accuracy of stellar parameter estimation from Gaia spectrophotometry using three algorithms, demonstrating high precision for bright stars and reasonable estimates even at fainter magnitudes across various stellar parameters.
Contribution
It compares three algorithms for estimating stellar parameters from Gaia BP/RP spectra and introduces Aeneas, which infers posterior PDFs and incorporates additional data for improved accuracy.
Findings
Estimated Teff within 1% at G=15 for low extinction
Logg estimated within 0.1-0.2 dex at G=15
Extinction estimated to 0.05-0.2 mag across the full parameter range
Abstract
Gaia will obtain astrometry and spectrophotometry for essentially all sources in the sky down to a broad band magnitude limit of G=20, an expected yield of 10^9 stars. Its main scientific objective is to reveal the formation and evolution of our Galaxy through chemo-dynamical analysis. In addition to inferring positions, parallaxes and proper motions from the astrometry, we must also infer the astrophysical parameters of the stars from the spectrophotometry, the BP/RP spectrum. Here we investigate the performance of three different algorithms (SVM, ILIUM, Aeneas) for estimating the effective temperature, line-of-sight interstellar extinction, metallicity and surface gravity of A-M stars over a wide range of these parameters and over the full magnitude range Gaia will observe (G=6-20mag). One of the algorithms, Aeneas, infers the posterior probability density function over all…
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