- BOSS Ancillary
- Stripe 82 Transients
- SNe Hosts
- BCGs in Stripe 82
- High-SN LRGs
- Reddened Quasars
- NQLB
- Variable QSOs
- K-band QSOs
- Low-Mass Stars
- Low-Mass Binaries
- White Dwarfs
- Distant Halo Giants
- Bright Galaxies
- Optical Blazars
- X-Ray Galaxies
- X-Ray Sources
- Radio Galaxies
- Galaxies near QSOs
- LBGs
- BAL QSO Variability
- Narrow-line QSOs
- Double-Lobed QSOs
- High-z QSOs
- UKIDSS QSOs
- BOSS Targeting
- Ancillary Targets
Low-Mass Binary Stars
Summary
Spectra for widely-separated binary stars of spectral class M
Finding Targets
An object whose ANCILLARY_TARGET1
value includes one or more of
the bitmasks in the following table was targeted for spectroscopy as part of this ancillary
target program. See SDSS-III bitmasks to learn how
to use these values to identify objects in this ancillary target program.
Note the caveat regarding observations of these targets on some early BOSS plates
Program (bit name) |
Bit | Target Description |
---|---|---|
SPOKE | 41 | Widely-separated binary systems in which both stars are low-mass (spectral class M) |
Description
Ultra-wide, low-mass binaries probe how dynamical interactions affect and shape star formation process and the environments in which those processes occur. Such binaries are also ideal coeval laboratories to constrain and calibrate properties of low-mass stars, because the two stars in the binary system were presumably born at the same time, from the same material.
The Sloan Low-mass Wide Pairs of Kinematically Equivalent Stars (SLoWPoKES; Dhital et al. 2010) catalog is the largest sample so far of wide, low-mass binaries. The objects in the catalog were identified from common proper motions and photometric distances, but without any information about stellar radial velocities. The goal of this ancillary target program was to get RV information about these stars to better constrain their binary system membership, which will in turn lead to a better understanding of widely-separated binary star systems.
Primary contact
Saurav Dhital |
---|
Boston University |
saurav -at- bu.edu |
Other contacts
Keivan Stassun
Target selection details
Targets for this program were selected in two ways:
- SLoWPoKES systems of spectral type M0 or later that have robust SDSS/USNO-B proper motions (Munn et al. 2004)
- systems of spectral type M4 or later, without proper motions
Both sets of targets were selected to have angular separations of 65-180 arcsec, to avoid fiber collisions; and also to be brighter than ifib2 = 20 to achieve the critical signal-to-noise radio. The pairs from the second sub-sample (M4 or later) are valuable for probing lower-mass, mid-to-late-type-M stars, which were underrepresented in SLoWPoKES.
Although the lack of proper motion matching for pairs in the second target selection sub-sample would make them more susceptible to chance alignments, the BOSS radial velocities obtained by this ancillary target program confirm or disprove their common motions.
From the combined sample using both target selection methods, 500 pairs were randomly selected for targeting with BOSS, with both stellar components being observed. The measured radial velocities can be used to verify the physical association of the ultra-wide binaries; this will be especially important for the second set of targets for which there were no previously-known proper motions. The spectra can be used to measure and calibrate the metallicity and mass-age-activity relationship for low-mass stars (e.g., Dhital et al. 2012), especially at mid-late M spectral types.
Caveat
There was an error in correcting the positions of the target for their proper motions in the first year of the ancillary target program, affecting targets in plates numbered less than 3879 or between 3965-3987.
REFERENCES
Dhital, S., West, A. A., Stassun, K. G., and Bochanski, J. J., 2010, AJ, 139, 2556,
doi:10.1088/0004-6256/139/6/2566
Dhital, S., West, A. A., Stassun, K. G., Bochanski, J. J., Massey, A. P., and Bastein, F. A.,
2012, AJ, 143, 67,
doi:10.1088/0004-6256/143/3/67
Munn, J. A., et al., 2004, AJ, 127, 3034,
doi:10.1086/383292