The AMBRE Project: searching for the closest solar siblings
V. Adibekyan, P. de Laverny, A. Recio-Blanco, S. G. Sousa, E., Delgado-Mena, G. Kordopatis, A. C. S. Ferreira, N. C. Santos, A. A. Hakobyan,, and M. Tsantaki

TL;DR
This study searches for stars that formed with the Sun by analyzing spectra, chemical compositions, ages, and kinematics, identifying a few promising solar sibling candidates in the AMBRE database.
Contribution
It combines high-resolution spectroscopy, Gaia data, and isotopic analysis to improve identification of solar siblings, introducing a multi-faceted approach.
Findings
Identified 4 potential solar sibling candidates.
HD186302 is the most probable candidate.
Isotopic ratios support candidate selection.
Abstract
Finding solar siblings, that is, stars that formed in the same cluster as the Sun, will yield information about the conditions at the Sun's birthplace. We search for solar sibling candidates in AMBRE, the very large spectra database of solar vicinity stars. Since the ages and chemical abundances of solar siblings are very similar to those of the Sun, we carried out a chemistry- and age-based search for solar sibling candidates. We used high-resolution spectra to derive precise stellar parameters and chemical abundances of the stars. We used these spectroscopic parameters together with Gaia DR2 astrometric data to derive stellar isochronal ages. Gaia data were also used to study the kinematics of the sibling candidates. From the about 17000 stars that are characterized within the AMBRE project, we first selected 55 stars whose metallicities are closest to the solar value (-0.1 < [Fe/H] <…
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