Abundances of disk giants: O, Mg, Ca and Ti Virtual Observatory Resource

Authors
  1. Jonsson H.
  2. Ryde N.
  3. Nordlander T.
  4. Pehlivan Rhodin A.
  5. Hartman H.,Jonsson P.
  6. Eriksson K.
  7. Published by
    CDS
Abstract

The Galactic bulge is an intriguing and significant part of our Galaxy, but it is hard to observe because it is both distant and covered by dust in the disk. Therefore, there are not many high-resolution optical spectra of bulge stars with large wavelength coverage, whose determined abundances can be compared with nearby, similarly analyzed stellar samples. We aim to determine the diagnostically important alpha elements of a sample of bulge giants using high-resolution optical spectra with large wavelength coverage. The abundances found are compared to similarly derived abundances from similar spectra of similar stars in the local thin and thick disks. In this first paper we focus on the solar neighborhood reference sample. We used spectral synthesis to derive the stellar parameters as well as the elemental abundances of both the local and bulge samples of giants. We took special care to benchmark our method of determining stellar parameters against independent measurements of effective temperatures from angular diameter measurements and surface gravities from asteroseismology. In this first paper we present the method used to determine the stellar parameters and elemental abundances, evaluate them, and present the results for our local disk sample of 291 giants. When comparing our determined spectroscopic temperatures to those derived from angular diameter measurements, we reproduce these with a systematic difference of +10K and a standard deviation of 53K. The spectroscopic gravities reproduce those determined from asteroseismology with a systematic offset of +0.10dex and a standard deviation of 0.12dex. When it comes to the abundance trends, our sample of local disk giants closely follows trends found in other works analyzing solar neighborhood dwarfs, showing that the much brighter giant stars are as good abundance probes as the often used dwarfs.

Keywords
  1. giant-stars
  2. chemical-abundances
  3. spectroscopy
Bibliographic source Bibcode
2017A&A...598A.100J
See also HTML
https://cdsarc.cds.unistra.fr/viz-bin/cat/J/A+A/598/A100
IVOA Identifier IVOID
ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/598/A100
Document Object Identifer DOI
doi:10.26093/cds/vizier.35980100

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History

2017-02-08T09:50:10Z
Resource record created
2017-02-08T09:50:10Z
Created
2022-09-13T15:02:51Z
Updated

Contact

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CDS support team
Postal Address
CDS, Observatoire de Strasbourg, 11 rue de l'Universite, F-67000 Strasbourg, France
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cds-question@unistra.fr