Stellar labels for hot stars from low-resolution spectra - I. the HotPayne method and results for 330,000 stars from LAMOST DR6
Maosheng Xiang, Hans-Walter Rix, Yuan-Sen Ting, Rolf-Peter Kudritzki,, Charlie Conroy, Eleonora Zari, Jian-Rong Shi, Norbert Przybilla, Maria, Ramirez-Tannus, Andrew Tkachenko, Sarah Gebruers, Xiao-Wei Liu

TL;DR
This paper develops a method to determine detailed stellar labels for hot stars using low-resolution spectra from LAMOST, significantly expanding the sample size and providing insights into stellar properties and rotation.
Contribution
It introduces the HotPayne method for simultaneous fitting of 11 stellar labels from low-resolution spectra, filling a gap in large-scale hot star analysis.
Findings
Achieved stellar parameter estimates for 330,000 hot stars.
Demonstrated the potential for precise abundance measurements with high S/N spectra.
Revealed the distribution of stellar rotation velocities, including a sharp cutoff at critical rotation.
Abstract
We set out to determine stellar labels from low-resolution survey spectra of hot, OBA stars with effective temperature (Teff) higher than 7500K. This fills a gap in the scientific analysis of large spectroscopic stellar surveys such as LAMOST, which offers spectra for millions of stars at R=1800. We first explore the theoretical information content of such spectra for determining stellar labels, via the Cram\'er-Rao bound. We show that in the limit of perfect model spectra and observed spectra with S/N of 100, precise estimates are possible for a wide range of stellar labels: not only the effective temperature Teff, surface gravity logg, and projected rotation velocity vsini, but also the micro-turbulence velocity, Helium abundance and the elemental abundances [C/H], [N/H], [O/H], [Si/H], [S/H], and [Fe/H]. Our analysis illustrates that the temperature regime of around 9500K is…
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