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Atomic data for the Gaia-ESO Survey

Authors :
Martin Asplund
Nils Ryde
Paul S. Barklem
Andrew R. Casey
Bengt Edvardsson
Henrik Jönsson
A. C. Lanzafame
Andreas Korn
Šarūnas Mikolaitis
L. Morbidelli
Gerard Gilmore
Maria Bergemann
E. Pancino
Lorenzo Monaco
Ulrike Heiter
Francesco Damiani
P. de Laverny
Clare Worley
Laura Magrini
Carmela Lardo
Paula Jofre
Sofia Feltzing
Simone Zaggia
Thomas Bensby
A. Bayo Aran
Rodolfo Smiljanic
Sofia Randich
Karin Lind
Juliet C. Pickering
Thomas Masseron
Worley, Clare [0000-0001-9310-2898]
Gilmore, Gerard [0000-0003-4632-0213]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Heiter U.
Lind K.
Bergemann M.
Asplund M.
Mikolaitis S.
Barklem P.S.
Masseron T.
De Laverny P.
Magrini L.
Edvardsson B.
Jonsson H.
Pickering J.C.
Ryde N.
Bayo Aran A.
Bensby T.
Casey A.R.
Feltzing S.
Jofre P.
Korn A.J.
Pancino E.
Damiani F.
Lanzafame A.
Lardo C.
Monaco L.
Morbidelli L.
Smiljanic R.
Worley C.
Zaggia S.
Randich S.
Gilmore G.F.
Source :
Astronomy & Astrophysics
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, 2021.

Abstract

We describe the atomic and molecular data that were used for the abundance analyses of FGK-type stars carried out within the Gaia-ESO Survey. We present an unprecedented effort to create a homogeneous line list, which was used by several abundance analysis groups to calculate synthetic spectra and equivalent widths. The atomic data are accompanied by quality indicators and detailed references to the sources. The atomic and molecular data are made publicly available in electronic form. In general experimental transition probabilities were preferred but theoretical values were also used. Astrophysical gf-values were avoided due to the model-dependence of such a procedure. For elements whose lines are significantly affected by hyperfine structure or isotopic splitting a concerted effort has been made to collate the necessary data for the individual line components. We also performed a detailed investigation of available data for line broadening due to collisions with neutral hydrogen atoms. Synthetic spectra calculated for the Sun and Arcturus were used to assess the blending properties of the lines. Among a subset of over 1300 lines of 35 elements in the wavelength ranges from 475 nm to 685 nm and from 850 nm to 895 nm we identified about 200 lines of 24 species which have accurate gf-values and are free of blends in the spectra of the Sun and Arcturus. For the broadening due to collisions with neutral hydrogen we recommend data based on Anstee-Barklem-O'Mara theory, where available, and to avoid lines of neutral species otherwise. Theoretical broadening data by R.L. Kurucz should be used for Sc II, Ti II, and Y II lines. For ionised rare-earth species the Uns\"old approximation with an enhancement factor of 1.5 for the line width can be used. Desirable improvements in atomic data were identified for a number of species, including Al I, S I, Cr II, Na I, Si I, Ca II, and Ni I.<br />Comment: Accepted for publication in section 12. Atomic, molecular, and nuclear data of Astronomy and Astrophysics; main part 25 pages, 8 tables, 5 figures; appendices 53 pages, 23 tables, 29 figures

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Astronomy & Astrophysics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....97e7ee434ae4949a1fb410a72b7fb16b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.17863/cam.74463