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Determining Stellar Elemental Abundances from DESI Spectra with the Data-Driven Payne

Authors :
Zhang, Meng
Xiang, Maosheng
Ting, Yuan-Sen
Wang, Jiahui
Li, Haining
Zou, Hu
Nie, Jundan
Mou, Lanya
Wu, Tianmin
Wu, Yaqian
Liu, Jifeng
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Stellar abundances for a large number of stars are key information for the study of Galactic formation history. Large spectroscopic surveys such as DESI and LAMOST take median-to-low resolution ($R\lesssim5000$) spectra in the full optical wavelength range for millions of stars. However, line blending effect in these spectra causes great challenges for the elemental abundances determination. Here we employ the DD-PAYNE, a data-driven method regularised by differential spectra from stellar physical models, to the DESI EDR spectra for stellar abundance determination. Our implementation delivers 15 labels, including effective temperature $T_{\rm eff}$, surface gravity $\log g$, microturbulence velocity $v_{\rm mic}$, and abundances for 12 individual elements, namely C, N, O, Mg, Al, Si, Ca, Ti, Cr, Mn, Fe, Ni. Given a spectral signal-to-noise ratio of 100 per pixel, internal precision of the label estimates are about 20 K for $T_{\rm eff}$, 0.05 dex for $\log~g$, and 0.05 dex for most elemental abundances. These results are agree with theoretical limits from the Cr\'amer-Rao bound calculation within a factor of two. The Gaia-Enceladus-Sausage that contributes the majority of the accreted halo stars are discernible from the disk and in-situ halo populations in the resultant [Mg/Fe]-[Fe/H] and [Al/Fe]-[Fe/H] abundance spaces. We also provide distance and orbital parameters for the sample stars, which spread a distance out to $\sim$100 kpc. The DESI sample has a significant higher fraction of distant (or metal-poor) stars than other existed spectroscopic surveys, making it a powerful data set to study the Galactic outskirts. The catalog is publicly available.<br />Comment: 18 pages, 12 figures. Submitted to ApJS

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2402.06242
Document Type :
Working Paper