LAMOST Time-Domain Survey: First Results of four $K$2 plates
Song Wang, Haotong Zhang, Zhongrui Bai, Hailong Yuan, Maosheng Xiang,, Bo Zhang, Wen Hou, Fang Zuo, Bing Du, Tanda Li, Fan Yang, Kaiming Cui, Yilun, Wang, Jiao Li, Mikhail Kovalev, Chunqian Li, Hao Tian, Weikai Zong, Henggeng, Han, Chao Liu, A-Li Luo, Jianrong Shi, Jian-Ning Fu

TL;DR
The paper presents initial results from LAMOST's time-domain spectroscopic survey of four K2 plates, including data collection, stellar parameter estimation, RV calibration, and binary candidate identification, demonstrating the survey's potential for advancing stellar astrophysics.
Contribution
This work provides the first data release and analysis of the LAMOST time-domain survey, including methods for stellar parameters, RV calibration, and binary detection, which are novel in the context of this survey.
Findings
Collected over 1.2 million spectra with high S/N ratios.
Achieved good agreement of stellar parameters with APOGEE.
Identified about 2700 binary candidates.
Abstract
From Oct. 2019 to Apr. 2020, LAMOST performs a time-domain spectroscopic survey of four 2 plates with both low- and med-resolution observations. The low-resolution spectroscopic survey gains 282 exposures (46.6 hours) over 25 nights, yielding a total of about 767,000 spectra, and the med-resolution survey takes 177 exposures (49.1 hours) over 27 nights, collecting about 478,000 spectra. More than 70%/50% of low-resolution/med-resolution spectra have signal-to-noise ratio higher than 10. We determine stellar parameters (e.g., , log, [Fe/H]) and radial velocity (RV) with different methods, including LASP, DD-Payne, and SLAM. In general, these parameter estimations from different methods show good agreement, and the stellar parameter values are consistent with those of APOGEE. We use the DR2 RV data to calculate a median RV zero point (RVZP) for…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
