Standard stellar luminosities: what are typical and limiting accuracies in the era after Gaia?
Künye
Eker, Z., Soydugan, F., Bilir, S., & Baklş, V. (2021). Standard stellar luminosities: What are typical and limiting accuracies in the era after gaia? Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 507(3), 3583-3592. doi:10.1093/mnras/stab2302Özet
Methods of obtaining stellar luminosities (L) have been revised and a new concept, standard stellar luminosity, has been defined. In this paper, we study three methods: (i) a direct method from radii and effective temperatures; (ii) a method using a mass–luminosity relation (MLR); and (iii) a method requiring a bolometric correction. If the unique bolometric correction (BC) of a star extracted from a flux ratio (fV/fBol) obtained from the observed spectrum with sufficient spectral coverage and resolution are used, the third method is estimated to provide an uncertainty (ΔL/L) typically at a low percentage, which could be as accurate as 1 per cent, perhaps more. The typical and limiting uncertainties of the predicted L of the three methods were compared. The secondary methods, which require either a pre-determined non-unique BC or MLR, were found to provide less accurate luminosities than the direct method, which could provide stellar luminosities with a typical accuracy of 8.2–12.2 per cent while its estimated limiting accuracy is 2.5 per cent.