ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Models of stellar spectra are necessary for interpreting light from individual stars, planets, integrated stellar populations, nebulae, and the interstellar medium. We provide a comprehensive and homogeneous collection of synthetic spectra for a wide range of atmospheric parameters and chemical compositions. We compile atomic and molecular data from the literature. We adopt the largest and most recent set of ATLAS9 model atmospheres, and use the radiative code ASS$epsilon$T.The resulting collection of spectra is made publicly available at medium and high-resolution ($Requivlambda/deltalambda$ = 10,000, 100,000 and 300,000 spectral grids, which include variations in effective temperature between 3500 K and 30,000 K, surface gravity ($0le log g le 5$), and metallicity ($-5 le$[Fe/H]$le +0. 5$), spanning the wavelength interval 120-6500 nm. A second set of denser grids with additional dimensions, [$alpha$/Fe] and micro-turbulence, are also provided (covering 200-2500 nm). We compare models with observations for a few representative cases.
We present infrared spectral indices (1.0-2.3 um) of Galactic late-type giants and red supergiants (RSGs). We used existing and new spectra obtained at resolution power R=2000 with SpeX on the IRTF telescope. While a large CO equivalent width (EW), a
The HST Treasury Program Advanced Spectral Library Project: Cool Stars was designed to collect representative, high quality ultraviolet spectra of eight evolved F-M type cool stars. The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) echelle spectra of t
The observable spectrum of an unresolved binary star system is a superposition of two single-star spectra. Even without a detectable velocity offset between the two stellar components, the combined spectrum of a binary system is in general different
The X-shooter Spectral Library (XSL) is an empirical stellar library at medium spectral resolution covering the wavelength range from 3000 AA to 24 800 AA. This library aims to provide a benchmark for stellar population studies. In this work, we pres
$Aims.$ We present a database of 43,340 atmospheric models ($sim$80,000 models at the conclusion of the project) for stars with stellar masses between 9 and 120 $M_{odot}$, covering the region of the OB main-sequence and Wolf-Rayet (W-R) stars in the