AN ANALYSIS OF THE REVISED $\zeta $ INDEX IN RELATION TO THE METAL CONTENT OF M DWARF STARS
POSTER
Abstract
In 2007 Leìpine et al. created a proxy for the metallicity of M dwarfs known as the $\zeta $ (zeta) index. It was redefined in 2011 by Dhital et al., in hopes of increasing accuracy. We set out to find the locations of high $\zeta $ value M dwarfs in the Milky Way Galaxy using the redefined index from Dhital et al. (2011) and observed 1962 high signal to noise stars from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. However, we discovered flaws in the revised $\zeta $ index. We were unable to find the locations of "metal-rich" M dwarfs because the revised $\zeta $ index is not an accurate measure of metallicity. As the spectral type of a given M dwarf increases, so does the calculated $\zeta $ value for that star. The dependence on spectral type suggests that the revised $\zeta $ index is incorrect because spectral type should not have a direct correlation to metallicity. The Dhital et al. (2011) $\zeta $ index also places exceedingly metal rich stars in the halo of the galaxy, and more metal poor stars in the disk, which denied expectations based on previous research.
*The Science Research Mentoring Program is supported by NASA under grant award NNX09AL36G
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