uvby-beta photometry of solar twins The solar colors, model atmospheres, and the T(eff) and metallicity scales


Autoria(s): MELENDEZ, J.; SCHUSTER, W. J.; SILVA, J. S.; RAMIREZ, I.; CASAGRANDE, L.; COELHO, P.
Contribuinte(s)

UNIVERSIDADE DE SÃO PAULO

Data(s)

18/04/2012

18/04/2012

2010

Resumo

Aims. Solar colors have been determined on the uvby-beta photometric system to test absolute solar fluxes, to examine colors predicted by model atmospheres as a function of stellar parameters (T(eff), log g, [Fe/H]), and to probe zero-points of T(eff) and metallicity scales. Methods. New uvby-beta photometry is presented for 73 solar-twin candidates. Most stars of our sample have also been observed spectroscopically to obtain accurate stellar parameters. Using the stars that most closely resemble the Sun, and complementing our data with photometry available in the literature, the solar colors on the uvby-beta system have been inferred. Our solar colors are compared with synthetic solar colors computed from absolute solar spectra and from the latest Kurucz (ATLAS9) and MARCS model atmospheres. The zero-points of different T(eff) and metallicity scales are verified and corrections are proposed. Results. Our solar colors are (b - y)(circle dot) = 0.4105 +/- 0.0015, m(1,circle dot) = 0.2122 +/- 0.0018, c(1,circle dot) = 0.3319 +/- 0.0054, and beta(circle dot) = 2.5915 +/- 0.0024. The (b - y)(circle dot) and m(1,circle dot) colors obtained from absolute spectrophotometry of the Sun agree within 3-sigma with the solar colors derived here when the photometric zero-points are determined from either the STIS HST observations of Vega or an ATLAS9 Vega model, but the c(1,circle dot) and beta(circle dot) synthetic colors inferred from absolute solar spectra agree with our solar colors only when the zero-points based on the ATLAS9 model are adopted. The Kurucz solar model provides a better fit to our observations than the MARCS model. For photometric values computed from the Kurucz models, (b - y)(circle dot) and m(1,circle dot) are in excellent agreement with our solar colors independently of the adopted zero-points, but for c(1,circle dot) and beta circle dot agreement is found only when adopting the ATLAS9 zero-points. The c(1,circle dot) color computed from both the Kurucz and MARCS models is the most discrepant, probably revealing problems either with the models or observations in the u band. The T(eff) calibration of Alonso and collaborators has the poorest performance (similar to 140 K off), while the relation of Casagrande and collaborators is the most accurate (within 10 K). We confirm that the Ramirez & Melendez uvby metallicity calibration, recommended by Arnadottir and collaborators to obtain [Fe/H] in F, G, and K dwarfs, needs a small (similar to 10%) zero-point correction to place the stars and the Sun on the same metallicity scale. Finally, we confirm that the c(1) index in solar analogs has a strong metallicity sensitivity.

DGAPA-PAPIIT (UNAM)[IN101495]

DGAPA-PAPIIT (UNAM)[IN111500]

CONACyT (Mexico)[1219-E9203]

CONACyT (Mexico)[27884E]

CONACyT (Mexico)[49434F]

Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia (FCT, Portugal)[PTDC/CTE-AST/098528/2008]

Ciencia 2007 fellowship

Identificador

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS, v.522, 2010

0004-6361

http://producao.usp.br/handle/BDPI/15644

10.1051/0004-6361/201014741

http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201014741

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

EDP SCIENCES S A

Relação

Astronomy & Astrophysics

Direitos

closedAccess

Copyright EDP SCIENCES S A

Palavras-Chave #Sun: fundamental parameters #stars: atmospheres #stars: fundamental parameters #stars: solar-type #METAL-POOR STARS #EFFECTIVE TEMPERATURE SCALE #GENEVA-COPENHAGEN SURVEY #INFRARED FLUX METHOD #MAIN-SEQUENCE STARS #HIGH-VELOCITY #CHEMICAL-COMPOSITION #STROMGREN PHOTOMETRY #GIANT STARS #FGK STARS #Astronomy & Astrophysics
Tipo

article

original article

publishedVersion