Infrared colours and inferred masses of metal-poor giant stars in the Kepler field
Andrew R. Casey, Grant M. Kennedy, Tom R. Hartle, Kevin C. Schlaufman

TL;DR
This paper develops a new photometric method to identify metal-poor giant stars in the Kepler field with high accuracy, enabling better studies of the Galaxy's structure and evolution.
Contribution
It introduces an improved giant star selection technique using g-band, DDO51, and mid-infrared photometry, reducing contamination and revealing metallicity correlations.
Findings
Selection contamination less than 1%
80% completeness for giants with T_eff < 5250 K
Masses from asteroseismic scaling relations are overestimated by 20-175%
Abstract
Intrinsically luminous giant stars in the Milky Way are the only potential volume-complete tracers of the distant disk, bulge, and halo. The chemical abundances of metal-poor giants also reflect the compositions of the earliest star-forming regions, providing the initial conditions for the chemical evolution of the Galaxy. However, the intrinsic rarity of metal-poor giants combined with the difficulty of efficiently identifying them with broad-band optical photometry has made it difficult to exploit them for studies of the Milky Way. We re-derive a giant star photometric selection using existing public g-band and narrow-band DDO51 photometry obtained in the Kepler field. Our selection is simple and yields a contamination rate of main-sequence stars of 1% and a completeness of about 80% for giant stars with K - subject to the selection function of…
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