Melissa Ness
Max Planck Society
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Featured researches published by Melissa Ness.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016
Marie Martig; Morgan Fouesneau; Hans-Walter Rix; Melissa Ness; Szabolcs Mészáros; D. A. García-Hernández; Marc H. Pinsonneault; Aldo M. Serenelli; Victor Silva Aguirre; Olga Zamora
We show that the masses of red giant stars can be well predicted from their photospheric carbon and nitrogen abundances, in conjunction with their spectroscopic stellar labels log g, Teff, and [Fe/H]. This is qualitatively expected from mass-dependent post-main-sequence evolution. We here establish an empirical relation between these quantities by drawing on 1475 red giants with asteroseismic mass estimates from Kepler that also have spectroscopic labels from Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE) DR12. We assess the accuracy of our model, and find that it predicts stellar masses with fractional rms errors of about 14 per cent (typically 0.2 M⊙). From these masses, we derive ages with rms errors of 40 per cent. This empirical model allows us for the first time to make age determinations (in the range 1–13 Gyr) for vast numbers of giant stars across the Galaxy. We apply our model to ∼52 000 stars in APOGEE DR12, for which no direct mass and age information was previously available. We find that these estimates highlight the vertical age structure of the Milky Way disc, and that the relation of age with [α/M] and metallicity is broadly consistent with established expectations based on detailed studies of the solar neighbourhood.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017
Sarah L. Martell; Sanjib Sharma; Sven Buder; Ly Duong; Katharine J. Schlesinger; Jeffrey D. Simpson; Karin Lind; Melissa Ness; Martin Asplund; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; Andrew R. Casey; G. M. De Silva; Kenneth C. Freeman; Janez Kos; Jane Lin; Daniel B. Zucker; Tomaž Zwitter; Borja Anguiano; Carlos Bacigalupo; Daniela Carollo; Luca Casagrande; G. S. Da Costa; Jonathan Horner; D. Huber; E. A. Hyde; Prajwal R. Kafle; Geraint F. Lewis; David M. Nataf; Colin A. Navin; D. Stello
The Galactic Archaeology with HERMES (GALAH) Survey is a massive observational project to trace the Milky Ways history of star formation, chemical enrichment, stellar migration and minor mergers. Using high-resolution (R
The Astrophysical Journal | 2016
Melissa Ness; David W. Hogg; H.-W. Rix; Marie Martig; Marc H. Pinsonneault; A. Y. Q. Ho
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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017
Matthieu Portail; Ortwin Gerhard; Christopher Wegg; Melissa Ness
28,000) spectra taken with the High Efficiency and Resolution Multi-Element Spectrograph (HERMES) instrument at the Anglo-Australian Telescope (AAT), GALAH will determine stellar parameters and abundances of up to 29 elements for up to one million stars. Selecting targets from a colour-unbiased catalogue built from 2MASS, APASS and UCAC4 data, we expect to observe dwarfs at 0.3 to 3 kpc and giants at 1 to 10 kpc. This enables a thorough local chemical inventory of the Galactic thin and thick disks, and also captures smaller samples of the bulge and halo. In this paper we present the plan, process and progress as of early 2016 for GALAH survey observations. In our first two years of survey observing we have accumulated the largest high-quality spectroscopic data set at this resolution, over 200,000 stars. We also present the first public GALAH data catalogue: stellar parameters (Teff, log(g), [Fe/H], [alpha/Fe]), radial velocity, distance modulus and reddening for 10680 observations of 9860 Tycho-2 stars that may be included in the first Gaia data release.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2014
Melissa Ness; Victor P. Debattista; Thomas Bensby; Sofia Feltzing; Rok Roskar; David R. Cole; Jennifer A. Johnson; Kenneth C. Freeman
The mass of a star is arguably its most fundamental parameter. For red giant stars, tracers luminous enough to be observed across the Galaxy, mass implies a stellar evolution age. It has proven to be extremely difficult to infer ages and masses directly from red giant spectra using existing methods. From the KEPLER and APOGEE surveys, samples of several thousand stars exist with high-quality spectra and asteroseismic masses. Here we show that from these data we can build a data-driven spectral model using The Cannon, which can determine stellar masses to
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2015
P. Di Matteo; A. E. Gomez; M. Haywood; F. Combes; M. D. Lehnert; Melissa Ness; Owain N. Snaith; D. Katz; B. Semelin
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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017
Ricardo P. Schiavon; Olga Zamora; R. Carrera; Sara Lucatello; A. C. Robin; Melissa Ness; Sarah L. Martell; Verne V. Smith; D. A. García-Hernández; A. Manchado; Ralph Schönrich; N. Bastian; Cristina Chiappini; Matthew Shetrone; J. Ted Mackereth; Rob A. Williams; Szabolcs Mészáros; Carlos Allende Prieto; Friedrich Anders; Dmitry Bizyaev; Timothy C. Beers; S. Drew Chojnowski; Katia Cunha; Courtney R. Epstein; Peter M. Frinchaboy; Ana G. Pérez; Frederick R. Hearty; Jon A. Holtzman; Jennifer A. Johnson; Karen Kinemuchi
0.07 dex from APOGEE DR12 spectra of red giants; these imply age estimates accurate to
Nature | 2015
L. M. Howes; Andrew R. Casey; Martin Asplund; Stefan C. Keller; D. Yong; David M. Nataf; R. Poleski; Karin Lind; Chiaki Kobayashi; C. I. Owen; Melissa Ness; Michael S. Bessell; G. S. Da Costa; Brian Paul Schmidt; P. Tisserand; A. Udalski; M. K. Szymański; I. Soszyński; G. Pietrzyński; K. Ulaczyk; Ł. Wyrzykowski; P. Pietrukowicz; J. Skowron; S. Kozłowski; P. Mróz
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The Astrophysical Journal | 2016
Melissa Ness; Gail Zasowski; Jennifer A. Johnson; E. Athanassoula; S. R. Majewski; A. E. García Pérez; Jonathan C. Bird; David L. Nidever; Donald P. Schneider; Jennifer Sobeck; Peter M. Frinchaboy; Kaike Pan; Dmitry Bizyaev; Daniel Oravetz; Audrey Simmons
0.2 dex (40 percent). We show that The Cannon constrains these ages foremost from spectral regions with CN absorption lines, elements whose surface abundances reflect mass-dependent dredge-up. We deliver an unprecedented catalog of 80,000 giants (including 20,000 red-clump stars) with mass and age estimates, spanning the entire disk (from the Galactic center to R
The Astrophysical Journal | 2016
David W. Hogg; Andrew R. Casey; Melissa Ness; H.-W. Rix; Daniel Foreman-Mackey; Sten Hasselquist; Anna Y. Q. Ho; Jon A. Holtzman; Steven R. Majewski; Sarah L. Martell; Szabolcs Mészáros; David L. Nidever; Matthew Shetrone
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