The Photometric Metallicity and Carbon Distributions of the Milky Way's Halo and Solar Neighborhood from S-PLUS Observations of SDSS Stripe 82
Devin D. Whitten, Vinicius M. Placco, Timothy C. Beers, Deokkeun An,, Young Sun Lee, Felipe Almeida-Fernandes, Fabio R. Herpich, Simone Daflon,, Carlos E. Barbosa, Helio D. Perottoni, Silvia Rossi, Patricia B. Tissera,, Jinmi Yoon, Kris Youakim, William Schoenell, Tiago Ribeiro

TL;DR
This study uses S-PLUS photometry to estimate metallicity, carbon abundance, and effective temperature for over 700,000 stars, revealing detailed chemical distributions in the Milky Way's halo and Solar Neighborhood.
Contribution
It introduces SPHINX, a novel photometric method utilizing multiple narrow-band filters to accurately determine stellar metallicities and carbon abundances over a wide temperature range.
Findings
Constrained the Milky Way's K-dwarf halo metallicity distribution function.
Identified 364 candidate carbon-enhanced metal-poor stars.
Achieved lower failure rates in metallicity estimates compared to previous methods.
Abstract
We report photometric estimates of effective temperature, , metallicity, [Fe/H], carbonicity, [C/Fe], and absolute carbon abundances, , for over 700,000 stars from the Southern Photometric Local Universe Survey (S-PLUS) Data Release 2, covering a substantial fraction of the equatorial Sloan Digital Sky Survey Stripe 82. We present an analysis for two stellar populations: 1) halo main-sequence turnoff stars and 2) K-dwarf stars of mass in the Solar Neighborhood. Application of the Stellar Photometric Index Network Explorer (SPHINX) to the mixed-bandwidth (narrow- plus wide-band) filter photometry from S-PLUS produces robust estimates of the metallicities and carbon abundances in stellar atmospheres over a wide range of temperature, . The use of multiple narrow-band S-PLUS filters enables SPHINX to…
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