The Best and Brightest Metal-Poor Stars
Kevin C. Schlaufman, Andrew R. Casey

TL;DR
This study introduces an efficient photometric selection method using all-sky surveys to identify bright, metal-poor stars, significantly increasing the sample size and enabling detailed follow-up studies of these ancient stellar populations.
Contribution
Developed a new selection technique using public photometry to find bright metal-poor stars, expanding the candidate pool and facilitating high-resolution spectroscopic follow-up.
Findings
Identified 11,916 metal-poor star candidates with V < 14.
Discovered 7 new stars with [Fe/H] < -3.0.
Approximately 3.8% of candidates have [Fe/H] < -3.0.
Abstract
The chemical abundances of large samples of extremely metal-poor (EMP) stars can be used to investigate metal-free stellar populations, supernovae, and nucleosynthesis as well as the formation and galactic chemical evolution of the Milky Way and its progenitor halos. However, current progress on the study of EMP stars is being limited by their faint apparent magnitudes. The acquisition of high signal-to-noise spectra for faint EMP stars requires a major telescope time commitment, making the construction of large samples of EMP star abundances prohibitively expensive. We have developed a new, efficient selection that uses only public, all-sky APASS optical, 2MASS near-infrared, and WISE mid-infrared photometry to identify bright metal-poor star candidates through their lack of molecular absorption near 4.6 microns. We have used our selection to identify 11,916 metal-poor star candidates…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · History and Developments in Astronomy
