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Dwarfs or giants? Stellar metallicities and distances in the Canada-France-Imaging-Survey from $ugrizG$ multi-band photometry

Authors :
Thomas, Guillaume F.
Annau, Nicholaas
McConnachie, Alan
Fabbro, Sebastien
Teimoorinia, Hossen
Côté, Patrick
Cuillandre, Jean-Charles
Gwyn, Stephen
Ibata, Rodrigo A.
Starkenburg, Else
Carlberg, Raymond
Famaey, Benoit
Fantin, Nicholas
Ferrarese, Laura
Hénault-Brunnet, Vincent
Jensen, Jaclyn
Lancon, Ariane
Lewis, Geraint F.
Martin, Nicolas F.
Navarro, Julio F.
Reylé, Céline
Sánchez-Janssen, Rubén
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

We present a new fully data-driven algorithm that uses photometric data from the Canada-France-Imaging-Survey (CFIS; $u$), Pan-STARRS 1 (PS1; $griz$), and Gaia ($G$) to discriminate between dwarf and giant stars and to estimate their distances and metallicities. The algorithm is trained and tested using the SDSS/SEGUE spectroscopic dataset and Gaia photometric/astrometric dataset. At [Fe/H]$<-1.2$, the algorithm succeeds in identifying more than 70% of the giants in the training/test set, with a dwarf contamination fraction below 30% (with respect to the SDSS/SEGUE dataset). The photometric metallicity estimates have uncertainties better than 0.2 dex when compared with the spectroscopic measurements. The distances estimated by the algorithm are valid out to a distance of at least $\sim 80$ kpc without requiring any prior on the stellar distribution, and have fully independent uncertainities that take into account both random and systematic errors. These advances allow us to estimate these stellar parameters for approximately 12 million stars in the photometric dataset. This will enable studies involving the chemical mapping of the distant outer disc and the stellar halo, including their kinematics using the Gaia proper motions. This type of algorithm can be applied in the Southern hemisphere to the first release of LSST data, thus providing an almost complete view of the external components of our Galaxy out to at least $\sim 80$ kpc. Critical to the success of these efforts will be ensuring well-defined spectroscopic training sets that sample a broad range of stellar parameters with minimal biases. A catalogue containing the training/test set and all relevant parameters within the public footprint of CFIS is available online.<br />Comment: 27 pages. 21 Figures. Accepted for publication in AAS. Training/testing sample available at: http://www.canfar.net/storage/list/gthomas/dwarfOrGiants.fits

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1910.03076
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ab4a77