Institute for Advanced Study Astrophysics Seminar
SDSS Spectroscopy of Peculiar Stars
The vast data base produced by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey enables the
identification and study of rare objects in sample sizes large enough
to investigate their ensemble properties. This talk will include an
overview of some of the work on stellar samples in the local galactic
neighborhood, including: carbon-enhanced dwarf main sequence stars;
low-mass metal-poor stars; close M-dwarf white-dwarf pairs and the role of
of orbital angular momentum in enhancing stellar activity; and star
formation in local dense and diffuse clouds. The large sample of
carbon-enhanced dwarf stars makes it possible to derive a statistical
luminosity function and align it with that of non-carbon-enriched
dwarf stars. The carbon-enhanced dwarfs are the analogues of main-sequence
K and early M stars but not of stars of about M3 and later, consistent with
the increasing depth of the convection zone and atmospheric carbon enhancement
due to mass transfer.
Date & Time
November 06, 2012 | 11:00am – 12:00pm
Location
Bloomberg Hall Astrophysics LibrarySpeakers
Jill Knapp
Affiliation
Princeton University