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C3PO: Towards a complete census of co-moving pairs of stars. I. High precision stellar parameters for 250 stars

Authors :
Yong, David
Liu, Fan
Ting, Yuan-Sen
Joyce, Meridith
Bitsch, Bertram
Dai, Fei
Dotter, Aaron
Karakas, Amanda I.
Murphy, Michael T.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

We conduct a line-by-line differential analysis of a sample of 125 co-moving pairs of stars (dwarfs and subgiants near solar metallicity). We obtain high precision stellar parameters with average uncertainties in effective temperature, surface gravity and metallicity of 16.5 K, 0.033 dex and 0.014 dex, respectively. We classify the co-moving pairs of stars into two groups, chemically homogeneous (conatal; |Delta[Fe/H]| $\le$ 0.04 dex) and inhomogeneous (non-conatal), and examine the fraction of chemically homogeneous pairs as a function of separation and effective temperature. The four main conclusions from this study are: (1) A spatial separation of \ds = 10$^6$ AU is an approximate boundary between homogeneous and inhomogeneous pairs of stars, and we restrict our conclusions to only consider the 91 pairs with \ds $\le$ 10$^6$ AU; (2) There is no trend between velocity separation and the fraction of chemically homogeneous pairs in the range \dv $\le$ 4 \kms; (3) We confirm that the fraction of chemically inhomogeneous pairs increases with increasing \teff\ and the trend matches a toy model of that expected from planet ingestion; (4) Atomic diffusion is not the main cause of the chemical inhomogeneity. A major outcome from this study is a sample of 56 bright co-moving pairs of stars with chemical abundance differences $\leq$ 0.02 dex (5\%) which is a level of chemical homogeneity comparable to that of the Hyades open cluster. These important objects can be used, in conjunction with star clusters and the \gaia\ ``benchmark'' stars, to calibrate stellar abundances from large-scale spectroscopic surveys.<br />Comment: MNRAS in press (see source file for full versions of long tables)

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2309.01546
Document Type :
Working Paper