High Dispersion Spectroscopy of Solar-type Superflare Stars. I. Temperature, Surface Gravity, Metallicity, and $v \sin i$
Yuta Notsu, Satoshi Honda, Hiroyuki Maehara, Shota Notsu, Takuya, Shibayama, Daisaku Nogami, Kazunari Shibata

TL;DR
This study used high dispersion spectroscopy to analyze 50 superflare stars, revealing that many have stellar parameters similar to the Sun, supporting the possibility that the Sun could produce superflares.
Contribution
First spectroscopic measurements of stellar parameters for a significant sample of solar-type superflare stars, improving accuracy over previous catalog data.
Findings
Over half of the stars are single, not binary.
Many superflare stars have parameters similar to the Sun.
Some stars are fast rotators, others are slow rotators.
Abstract
We conducted high dispersion spectroscopic observations of 50 superflare stars with Subaru/HDS, and measured the stellar parameters of them. These 50 targets were selected from the solar-type (G-type main sequence) superflare stars that we had discovered from the Kepler photometric data. As a result of these spectroscopic observations, we found that more than half (34 stars) of our 50 targets have no evidence of binary system. We then estimated effective temperature (), surface gravity (), metallicity ([Fe/H]), and projected rotational velocity () of these 34 superflare stars on the basis of our spectroscopic data. The accuracy of our estimations is higher than that of Kepler Input Catalog (KIC) values, and the differences between our values and KIC values (K, dex, and…
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