Earle Luck

Worcester R. and Cornelia B. Warner Professor of Astronomy

Research Specialities

Studies of stellar and galactic chemical evolution, stellar abundance analysis, isotopic abundance ratios, spectrum synthesis techniques, spectroscopic data reduction techniques.

Current Projects

Nearby Stars

Spectroscopy in the Local Neighborhood: A High Resolution Survey and Abundance Analysis of Selected Stars

The Nearby Stars program seeks information on the population of stars in the local neighborhood, i.e., those stars within several hundred parsecs of the Sun. This project will provide vital information on the spectral characteristics of these stars by obtaining high-resolution, high signal-to-noise spectroscopic data on a significant fraction of the stars within 15 parsecs, and by sampling the population within 100 parsecs. The parent sample for this program is those stars in the Hipparcos Parallax Catalog which are within 100 pc of the Sun. This list contains 22010 stars – obviously an impossibility for a high resolution spectroscopic survey. The subsets of interest for this project are the following:

  1. The stars with distances less than 15 parsecs with absolute magnitudes greater than 10.0 that are north of declination -30.0.
  2. Samples of stars with characteristics that make them of interest in regard to planets regardless of distance (but which are north of -30 declination) i.e.:
    1. Those stars which are known to have planets.
    2. Those stars “known” not to have planets.
    3. Stars which are metal-rich and hence according to the hypothesis of Gonzalez (1997, 1998) are likely to have planets.
    4. A randomly selected control sample of stars of similar spectral type to those of items a and b.
  3. A volume sampling of the stars within 100 pc of the Sun. We have selected two samples, one of giants (primarily type K0) and the other of dwarfs (primarily G0-G2) which uniformly sample the volume. The sample of giant stars is in hand and is currently under analysis.

Results for planet hosts and related objects can be found in Heiter & Luck 2003 (AJ, 126, 2015) and our results for the 15 parsec sample are in Luck & Heiter 2005 (AJ, 130, 1880). Revised and consolidated results are in Luck & Heiter 2006 (AJ, 131, 3069).

Cepheids

Stellar parameters and metallicities are being determined for a large sample (>150 stars) using multiphase high resolution data acquired at McDonald Observatory and a number of other observatories. This project is a collaboration with Sergei Andrievsky (Odessa, The Ukraine). The latest paper concerning the Galactic abundance gradient aspect of this project is Luck, Kovtyukh, & Andrievsky 2006 (AJ, July). We have investigated abundances in the young open cluster M25 comparing B star abundances with evolved objects (Comparative abundance analysis of the hot main sequence stars and their progeny in open cluster M 25,” 2000, A&A, 361, 189 with S.M. Andrievsky, V.V. Kovtyukh, S.A. Korotin, & Y.V. Beletsky) and have found one object which we believe to be a first crossing Cepheid (“SV Vul: a first crossing Cepheid?,” 2001, A&A 373, 589 with S.M. Andrievsky and V.V. Kovtyukh.). We have also considered multiphase abundances for these stars and our latest results are found in Andrievsky, Luck, & Kovtyukh 2005 (AJ 130, 1880).