Spectral energy distribution of M-subdwarfs: A study of their atmospheric properties
A. S. Rajpurohit, C. Reyle, F. Allard, D. Homeier, A. Bayo, O. Mousis,, S. Rajpurohit, J. G. Fernandez-Trincado

TL;DR
This study provides a comprehensive spectral analysis of M-subdwarfs across optical to near-infrared wavelengths, improving understanding of their atmospheric properties and validating current models for these metal-poor stars.
Contribution
It offers the first extensive spectral atlas of M-subdwarfs from optical to near-infrared and assesses the accuracy of atmospheric models in reproducing their spectra.
Findings
Models accurately reproduce spectral energy distribution and line profiles.
Most stars have gravities consistent with old stellar populations.
LHS 73 exhibits unexpectedly low gravity, indicating possible anomalies.
Abstract
Context. M-type subdwarfs are metal-poor low-mass stars and probe for the old populations in our Galaxy. Accurate knowledge of their atmospheric parameters and especially the composition is essential for understanding the chemical history of our Galaxy. Aims. The purpose of this work is to perform a detailed study of M-subdwarf spectra covering the full wavelength range from the optical to the near-infrared. It allows to do a more detailed analysis of the atmospheric composition in order to determine the stellar parameters, and to constrain the atmospheric models. The study will allow us to further understand physical and chemical processes such as increasing condensation of gas into dust, to point out the missing continuum opacities and see how the main band features are reproduced by the models. The spectral resolution and the large wavelength coverage used is a unique combination to…
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