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Chemical Properties of the Local Galactic Disk and Halo. I. Fundamental Properties of 1,544 Nearby, High Proper-Motion M dwarfs and subdwarfs (1911.04612v1)

Published 11 Nov 2019 in astro-ph.SR and astro-ph.GA

Abstract: Large numbers of low-to-medium resolution spectra of M-type dwarf stars from both the local Galactic disk and halo are available from various surveys. In order to fully exploit these data, we develop a template-fit method using a set of empirically assembled M dwarf/subdwarf classification templates, based on the measurements of the TiO and CaH molecular bands, to classify M dwarfs/subdwarfs by spectral type and metallicity class. We further present a pipeline to automatically determine the effective temperature, metallicity ([M/H]), alpha-element to iron abundance ratio ([alpha/Fe]), and surface gravity of M dwarfs/subdwarfs using the latest version of BT-Settl model atmospheres. We apply these methods to a set of low-to-medium resolution optical spectra of 1,544 high proper-motion (> 0.4"/yr) M dwarfs/subdwarfs. Our metallicity estimates appear to be consistent with the expected color-magnitude variation of stars relative to atmospheric composition, as our sample shows a clear stratification with respect to metallicity in the Gaia H-R diagram. Furthermore, the measured chemical parameters of the two components in 48 binary systems are in a good agreement with each other, which suggest a precision of 0.22 dex in [M/H], 0.08 dex in [alpha/Fe], and 0.16 dex in the combined index [alpha/Fe]+[M/H]. There is also a good consistency between metallicity class, obtained from the empirical classification templates, and the index [alpha/Fe]+M/H, obtained from model-fitting, which means that the more easily measured metallicity class can be used as a relatively reliable indicator of absolute alpha-element abundance, [alpha/H], in low-mass stars. Finally, we examine the distribution of our stars in the [alpha/Fe] vs. [M/H] diagram, which shows evidence of clustering in chemical abundance makeup, suggestive of discrete populations among the local disk and halo stars.

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