Targeting Bright Metal-poor Stars in the Disk and Halo Systems of the Galaxy
Guilherme Limberg, Rafael M. Santucci, Silvia Rossi, Derek Shank,, Vinicius M. Placco, Timothy C. Beers, Kevin C. Schlaufman, Andrew R. Casey,, H\'elio D. Perottoni, Young Sun Lee

TL;DR
This study spectroscopically analyzed nearly 1900 low-metallicity star candidates, confirming their metal-poor status, identifying numerous CEMP stars, and developing new Gaia-based criteria to efficiently target metal-poor stars in the galaxy's disk and halo.
Contribution
Introduces a Gaia EDR3-based target selection method that significantly improves the efficiency of identifying metal-poor stars in the galaxy.
Findings
56% of stars are metal-poor ([Fe/H] < -1.0)
19% of VMP and 43% of EMP stars are carbon-enhanced (CEMP)
Target selection success rates reach up to 96% for [Fe/H] ≤ -1.5
Abstract
We present the results of spectroscopic follow-up for 1897 low-metallicity star candidates, selected from the Best & Brightest (B&B) Survey, carried out with the GMOS-N/S (Gemini North/South telescopes) and Goodman (SOAR Telescope) spectrographs. From these low-resolution () spectra, we estimate stellar atmospheric parameters, as well as carbon and magnesium (representative of elements) abundance ratios. We confirm that of our program stars are metal-poor ([Fe/H] ), are very metal-poor (VMP; [Fe/H] ) and are extremely metal-poor (EMP; [Fe/H] ). There are 191 carbon-enhanced metal-poor (CEMP) stars, resulting in CEMP fractions of and for the VMP and EMP regimes, respectively. A total of 94 confirmed CEMP stars belong to Group I () and 97 to Group II () in the…
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