LOTUS: A (non-)LTE Optimization Tool for Uniform derivation of Stellar atmospheric parameters
Abstract
Precise fundamental atmospheric stellar parameters and abundance determination of individual elements in stars are important for all stellar population studies. Non-Local Thermodynamic Equilibrium (Non-LTE; hereafter NLTE) models are often important for such high precision, however, can be computationally complex and expensive, which renders the models less utilized in spectroscopic analyses. To alleviate the computational burden of such models, we developed a robust 1D, LTE and NLTE fundamental atmospheric stellar parameter derivation tool, LOTUS, to determine the effective temperature Teff, surface gravity g, metallicity [Fe/H] and microturbulent velocity vmic for FGK type stars, from equivalent width (EW) measurements of Fe I and Fe II lines. We utilize a generalized curve of growth method to take into account the EW dependencies of each Fe I and Fe II line on the corresponding atmospheric stellar parameters. A global differential evolution optimization algorithm is then used to derive the optimized fundamental parameters. Additionally, LOTUS can determine precise uncertainties for each stellar parameter using a Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) algorithm. We test and apply LOTUS on a sample of benchmark stars, as well as stars with available asteroseismic surface gravities from the K2 survey, and metal-poor stars from R-process Alliance (RPA) survey. We find very good agreement between our NLTE-derived parameters in LOTUS to non-spectroscopic values within Teff= 30 K and g= 0.10 dex for benchmark stars. We provide open access of our code, as well as of the interpolated pre-computed NLTE EW grids available on Github, and documentation with working examples on Readthedocs.
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