The Astrophysical Journal (Jan 2024)

J-PLUS: Beyond Spectroscopy. III. Stellar Parameters and Elemental-abundance Ratios for Five Million Stars from DR3

  • Yang Huang,
  • Timothy C. Beers,
  • Kai Xiao,
  • Haibo Yuan,
  • Young Sun Lee,
  • Hongrui Gu,
  • Jihye Hong,
  • Jifeng Liu,
  • Zhou Fan,
  • Paula Coelho,
  • Patricia Cruz,
  • F. J. Galindo-Guil,
  • Simone Daflon,
  • Fran Jiménez-Esteban,
  • Javier Cenarro,
  • David Cristóbal-Hornillos,
  • Carlos Hernández-Monteagudo,
  • Carlos López-Sanjuan,
  • Antonio Marín-Franch,
  • Mariano Moles,
  • Jesús Varela,
  • Héctor Vázquez Ramió,
  • Jailson Alcaniz,
  • Renato Dupke,
  • Alessandro Ederoclite,
  • Laerte Sodré Jr.,
  • Raul E. Angulo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ad6b94
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 974, no. 2
p. 192

Abstract

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We present a catalog of stellar parameters (effective temperature T _eff , surface gravity $\mathrm{log}g$ , age, and metallicity [Fe/H]) and elemental-abundance ratios ([C/Fe], [Mg/Fe], and [ α /Fe]) for some five million stars (4.5 million dwarfs and 0.5 million giant stars) in the Milky Way, based on stellar colors from the Javalambre Photometric Local Universe Survey (J-PLUS) DR3 and Gaia EDR3. These estimates are obtained through the construction of a large spectroscopic training set with parameters and abundances adjusted to uniform scales, and trained with a kernel principal component analysis. Owing to the seven narrow/medium-band filters employed by J-PLUS, we obtain precisions in the abundance estimates that are as good as or better than those derived from medium-resolution spectroscopy for stars covering a wide range of the parameter space: 0.10–0.20 dex for [Fe/H] and [C/Fe], and 0.05 dex for [Mg/Fe] and [ α /Fe]. Moreover, systematic errors due to the influence of molecular carbon bands on previous photometric-metallicity estimates (which only included two narrow/medium-band blue filters) have now been removed, resulting in photometric-metallicity estimates down to [Fe/H] ∼ −4.0, with typical uncertainties of 0.40 dex and 0.25 dex for dwarfs and giants, respectively. This large photometric sample should prove useful for the exploration of the assembly and chemical-evolution history of our Galaxy.

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