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Creators/Authors contains: "Maraston, Claudia"

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  1. {"Abstract":["This file contains simple stellar population (SSP) model spectra constructed from a version of the SDSS-IV MaNGA Stellar Library (MaStar; Yan et al. 2019, Abdurro'uf et al. 2022) that has been corrected for the effects of absorption in the CaII 3934, 3969 and NaI D 5891, 5897 transitions arising in the Milky Way's interstellar medium (ISM).  These corrections are described in full in Rubin et al. (2025), and our approach to constructing these SSP models is described in Maraston et al. (2020) and Rubin et al. (2025).  In brief, our models are calculated with the evolutionary population synthesis code of Maraston (2005), which is based on the fuel consumption theorem for the evaluation of the energetics of post-Main Sequence phases.  We use the calibrated median values of the stellar parameters calculated for the MaStar sample to generate representative stellar spectra as functions of effective temperature, surface gravity, and chemical composition.  These representative spectra are then used as input for the stellar population models.  The stellar parameter estimates are described in R. Yan et al. (2025, in preparation) and at https://www.sdss4.org/dr17/mastar/mastar-stellar-parameters/.  \n\nWe calculate SSPs using stars in metallicity bins centered at [Z/H] = -1.35, -0.33, 0.0, and +0.35 with an approximate bin width of 0.1 dex assuming a Salpeter IMF.  The SSP ages span 3 Myr to 15 Gyr and are calculated at 51 gridpoints.  For comparison, we also calculate the equivalent SSPs using the uncorrected MaStar spectra.  The datamodel is described below.\n\nHDU1: 51 x 4 x 1 x 3 matrix describing the parameters of each SSP spectrum.  Each gridpoint (i,j,k) contains a 3-element array listing the age (in Gyr), metallicity, and IMF slope (in linear mass units)\n\nHDU2: 2 x 4563 array containing the vacuum wavelength and spectral resolution (R) grids for models constructed from the uncorrected (original) stellar library.  The wavelength sampling is logarithmic and the wavelengths have units of Angstroms.  R = wave / (FWHM dwave)\n\nHDU3: 51 x 4 x 1 x 4563 matrix containing the SSPs constructed from the uncorrected (original) stellar library in units of erg/s/Ang/Msun  \n\nHDU4: 2 x 4542 array containing the vacuum wavelength and spectral resolution (R) grids for models constructed from the corrected (cleaned) stellar library.  The wavelength sampling is logarithmic and the wavelengths have units of Angstroms.  R = wave / (FWHM dwave)\n\nHDU5: 51 x 4 x 1 x 4542 matrix containing the SSPs constructed from the corrected (cleaned) stellar library in units of erg/s/Ang/Msun  "],"Other":["Preferred Citation\n\nIf you use these model spectra in your research, we ask that you please cite our article, "Sloan Digital Sky Survey IV MaStar: Quantification and Abatement of Interstellar Absorption in the Largest Empirical Stellar Spectral Library," Rubin et al. (2025), ApJ, 981 31, doi:10.3847/1538-4357/ad8eb6.  Please also cite this Zenodo deposit."]} 
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  2. Abstract We assess the impact of Caiiλλ3934, 3969 and Naiλλ5891, 5897 absorption arising in the interstellar medium (ISM) on the Sloan Digital Sky Survey-IV MaNGA Stellar Library (MaStar) and produce corrected spectroscopy for 80% of the 24,162-star catalog. We model the absorption strength of these transitions as a function of the stellar distance, Galactic latitude, and dust reddening based on high-spectral resolution studies. With this model, we identify 6342 MaStar stars that have negligible ISM absorption (WISM(CaiiK) < 0.07 Å andWISM(Nai5891) < 0.05 Å). For 12,110 of the remaining stars, we replace their NaiD profile (and their Caiiprofile for effective temperaturesTeff> 9000 K) with a coadded spectrum of low-ISM stars with similarTeff, surface gravity, and metallicity. For 738 additional stars withTeff> 9000 K, we replace these spectral regions with a matching ATLAS9-based BOSZ model. This results in a mean reduction inW(CaiiK) (W(NaiD)) of 0.4–0.7 Å (0.6–1.1 Å) for hot stars (Teff> 7610 K), and a mean reduction inW(NaiD) of 0.1–0.2 Å for cooler stars. We show that interstellar absorption in the simple stellar population (SSP) model spectra constructed from the original library artificially enhancesW(CaiiK) by ≳20% at young ages (<400 Myr); dramatically enhances the strength of stellar NaiD in starbursting systems (by ≳50%); and enhances stellar NaiD in older stellar populations (≳10 Gyr) by ≳10%. We provide SSP spectra constructed from the cleaned library and discuss the implications of these effects for stellar population synthesis analyses constraining the stellar age, [Na/Fe] abundance, and initial mass function. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available February 24, 2026
  3. {"Abstract":["This file contains a version of the SDSS-IV MaNGA Stellar Library (MaStar) which has been corrected for the effects of absorption in the CaII 3934, 3969 and NaI D 5891, 5897 transitions arising in the Milky Way's interstellar medium (ISM).  These corrections are described in full in Rubin et al. (2025).  In brief, we first develop a model of the absorption strengths of these transitions as a function of stellar distance, Galactic latitude, and dust reddening based upon high-spectral resolution studies.  We use this model to identify 6342 MaStar stars with negligible ISM absorption.  For 12110 of the remaining stars, we replace their NaI D profile (and their CaII profile for effective temperatures > 9000 K) with a coadded spectrum of low-ISM stars with similar effective temperature, surface gravity, and metallicity.  For 738 additional stars with effective temperatures > 9000 K, we replace these spectral regions with a matching ATLAS9-based BOSZ model.  This procedure yields corrected spectroscopy for 80% of the 24162-star catalog.\n\nThe spectra in this file are identical to those which have been unified to the 99.5th-percentile spectral resolution curve for MaStar and made available at https://www.sdss4.org/dr17/mastar/mastar-spectra (with the exception of the corrected spectral regions described above).  The datamodel is described below.    \n\nMANGAID - The XX-XXXXXX format MaNGA IDWAVE - Vacuum wavelength grid. The wavelength sampling is logarithmic (Angstroms)FLUX - Observed flux, corrected for Milky Way ISM contamination.  Extinction-corrected to above the Earth's atmosphere but not corrected for Galactic extinction (10^-17 erg/s/cm^2/Ang)IVAR - Inverse variance of the flux (10^34 s^2cm^4Ang^2/erg^2)PREDISP - Instrumental broadening sigma.  Does not include the effect of pixel integration (Angstroms)SRES - Spectral resolution = WAVE/(sqrt(8*ln(2)) * PREDISP)REPLACEMENT_CAII_FLG - Flag indicating treatment of the CaII spectral region.  Described in Table 3REPLACEMENT_NAID_FLG - Flag indicating treatment of the NaID spectral region.  Described in Table 3NSIG_THRESH - Maximum 3D distance in stellar parameter space from stars included in empirical replacement stack, if one was constructed.  Described in Sec. 3.1 and 3.2 (Psi_thresh)ewCaIIK_pred - Interstellar CaII K EW predicted by model described in Sec. 2.2 (Angstroms)ewNaI5891_pred - Interstellar NaI D 5891 EW predicted by model described in Sec. 2.2 (Angstroms)ewNaI5897_pred - Interstellar NaI D 5897 EW predicted by model described in Sec. 2.2 (Angstroms)"],"Other":["Preferred Citation\n\nIf you use these library spectra in your research, we ask that you please cite our article, "Sloan Digital Sky Survey IV MaStar: Quantification and Abatement of Interstellar Absorption in the Largest Empirical Stellar Spectral Library," Rubin et al. (2025), ApJ, 981 31, doi:10.3847/1538-4357/ad8eb6.  Please also cite this Zenodo deposit."]} 
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  4. Abstract Measurements of galaxy rotation curves provide direct measurements of the distribution of baryonic and dark matter in galaxies. Here, we present spectroscopic confirmation and one such rotation curve for az = 0.5325 galaxy observed with Keck I/MOSFIRE as a filler target for the Web Epoch of Reionization Survey. The rotation curve was derived from Hα6563 Å emission out to a galactocentric radius of approximately 24 kpc. The target's rotation curve is well fit by an arctangent curve, that when combined with broadbanned photometric constraints on the galaxy’s stellar mass, predicts a dark matter fraction consistent with results from the literature forz ∼ 0.5. We constrain the estimate for this galaxy's dark matter fraction to be 93%, out to a galactocentric radius of 30 kpc. 
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  5. Abstract We report the discovery of 15 exceptionally luminous 10 ≲z≲ 14 candidate galaxies discovered in the first 0.28 deg2of JWST/NIRCam imaging from the COSMOS-Web survey. These sources span rest-frame UV magnitudes of −20.5 >MUV> −22, and thus constitute the most intrinsically luminousz≳ 10 candidates identified by JWST to date. Selected via NIRCam imaging, deep ground-based observations corroborate their detection and help significantly constrain their photometric redshifts. We analyze their spectral energy distributions using multiple open-source codes and evaluate the probability of low-redshift solutions; we conclude that 12/15 (80%) are likely genuinez≳ 10 sources and 3/15 (20%) likely low-redshift contaminants. Three of ourz∼ 12 candidates push the limits of early stellar mass assembly: they have estimated stellar masses ∼ 5 × 109M, implying an effective stellar baryon fraction ofϵ∼ 0.2−0.5, whereϵ≡M/(fbMhalo). The assembly of such stellar reservoirs is made possible due to rapid, burst-driven star formation on timescales < 100 Myr where the star formation rate may far outpace the growth of the underlying dark matter halos. This is supported by the similar volume densities inferred forM∼ 1010Mgalaxies relative toM∼ 109M—both about 10−6Mpc−3—implying they live in halos of comparable mass. At such high redshifts, the duty cycle for starbursts would be of order unity, which could cause the observed change in the shape of the UV luminosity function from a double power law to a Schechter function atz≈ 8. Spectroscopic redshift confirmation and ensuing constraints of their masses will be critical to understand how, and if, such early massive galaxies push the limits of galaxy formation in the Lambda cold dark matter paradigm. 
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  6. ABSTRACT We calculate the fundamental stellar parameters effective temperature, surface gravity, and iron abundance – Teff, log g, [Fe/H] – for the final release of the Mapping Nearby Galaxies at APO (MaNGA) Stellar Library (MaStar), containing 59 266 per-visit-spectra for 24 290 unique stars at intermediate resolution (R ∼ 1800) and high S/N (median = 96). We fit theoretical spectra from model atmospheres by both MARCS and BOSZ-ATLAS9 to the observed MaStar spectra, using the full spectral fitting code pPXF. We further employ a Bayesian approach, using a Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) technique to map the parameter space and obtain uncertainties. Originally in this paper, we cross match MaStar observations with Gaia photometry, which enable us to set reliable priors and identify outliers according to stellar evolution. In parallel to the parameter determination, we calculate corresponding stellar population models to test the reliability of the parameters for each stellar evolutionary phase. We further assess our procedure by determining parameters for standard stars such as the Sun and Vega and by comparing our parameters with those determined in the literature from high-resolution spectroscopy (APOGEE and SEGUE) and from lower resolution matching template (LAMOST). The comparisons, considering the different methodologies and S/N of the literature surveys, are favourable in all cases. Our final parameter catalogue for MaStar cover the following ranges: 2592 ≤ Teff ≤ 32 983 K; −0.7 ≤ log g ≤ 5.4 dex; −2.9 ≤ [Fe/H] ≤ 1.0 dex and will be available with the last SDSS-IV Data Release, in 2021 December. 
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  7. Abstract This paper documents the seventeenth data release (DR17) from the Sloan Digital Sky Surveys; the fifth and final release from the fourth phase (SDSS-IV). DR17 contains the complete release of the Mapping Nearby Galaxies at Apache Point Observatory (MaNGA) survey, which reached its goal of surveying over 10,000 nearby galaxies. The complete release of the MaNGA Stellar Library accompanies this data, providing observations of almost 30,000 stars through the MaNGA instrument during bright time. DR17 also contains the complete release of the Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment 2 survey that publicly releases infrared spectra of over 650,000 stars. The main sample from the Extended Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (eBOSS), as well as the subsurvey Time Domain Spectroscopic Survey data were fully released in DR16. New single-fiber optical spectroscopy released in DR17 is from the SPectroscipic IDentification of ERosita Survey subsurvey and the eBOSS-RM program. Along with the primary data sets, DR17 includes 25 new or updated value-added catalogs. This paper concludes the release of SDSS-IV survey data. SDSS continues into its fifth phase with observations already underway for the Milky Way Mapper, Local Volume Mapper, and Black Hole Mapper surveys. 
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