Revised Best Estimates for the Age and Mass of the Methuselah Star HD 140283 Using MESA and Interferometry and Implications for 1D Convection (2024)

In light of recently revised observational measurements of the radius and spectroscopic parameters of the extremely old and metal-poor Gaia benchmark star HD 140283—also known as the Methuselah star due to prior suggestions that its age is in tension with the age of the universe—we present new, best estimates for the star's mass and age from stellar modeling. These are derived using 1D stellar evolutionary tracks computed with MESA and the most up-to-date measurements from CHARA interferometry. Excluding modeling variance from the uncertainties, we report a mass of 0.809 ± 0.001 M and an age of 12.01 ± 0.05 Gyr (1σ). When dominant sources of modeling uncertainty are taken into account, we report 0.81 ± 0.05 M and 12 ± 0.5 Gyr, respectively. These results are consistent with recent literature, and the best-fitting age is not in conflict with the currently accepted age of the universe (13.5 Gyr).

1.Introduction

Due to its old age, close proximity, and very low metallicity ([Fe/H] = Revised Best Estimates for the Age and Mass of the Methuselah Star HD 140283 Using MESA and Interferometry and Implications for 1D Convection (1) dex), the Methuselah star's importance as a benchmark has been well established over the past two decades (VandenBerg 2000a; VandenBerg et al. 2002, 2014, 2016; Bond et al. 2013; Creevey et al. 2015; Joyce & Chaboyer 2018a; Jimenez et al. 2019). With the newest radial measurements obtained from the interferometric instrument PAVO at the CHARA array (Karovicova et al. 2020), it is prudent to revise our predictions for HD 140283's other fundamental stellar parameters accordingly.

2.Methods

We use the Modules for Experiments in Stellar Astrophysics (MESA v11701; Paxton et al. 2011, 2013, 2015, 2018, 2019) software and an adaptive grid searching method (Joyce & Chaboyer 2018a, 2018b; Murphy et al. 2021) to construct a set of metal-poor stellar evolutionary tracks for HD 140283. We vary as inputs the mass, initial composition, and convective mixing length, αMLT, which parameterizes the efficiency of energy transport by convection in the low-mass star's outer envelope according to the Mixing Length Theory (MLT) formalism first established by Böhm-Vitense (1960).

Our search covers masses from 0.6 to 2.0 M, αMLT values 1.5–2.0× the pressure scale height, Revised Best Estimates for the Age and Mass of the Methuselah Star HD 140283 Using MESA and Interferometry and Implications for 1D Convection (2), and input metallicities, (Zin), between 0.00006 and 0.002 ([Fe/H] = −2.46 to −0.94).

Since previously reported ages for HD 140283 approach the age of the universe (e.g., VandenBerg 2000b), we uniformly adopt the helium abundance of the early universe, Yin = Yprimordial = 0.245.

Models are considered "valid" according to agreement with the effective temperature and luminosity constraints quoted in Karovicova et al. (2020) and shown in Figure 1. A pseudo-χ2 ranking scheme assesses relative goodness-of-fit among all classically valid tracks. The pseudo-χ2 cost function, equation (1), assigns equal statistical weighting to the modeled radius (R), luminosity (L), and surface metal-to-hydrogen mass fraction Z/Xsurf—a metric of the form introduced in Joyce & Chaboyer (2018b). To wit:

Revised Best Estimates for the Age and Mass of the Methuselah Star HD 140283 Using MESA and Interferometry and Implications for 1D Convection (3)

where Robs is the interferometric radius of HD 140283 with uncertainty σR,obs, Rmod is the modeled radius, and similarly for L and Z/X.

Revised Best Estimates for the Age and Mass of the Methuselah Star HD 140283 Using MESA and Interferometry and Implications for 1D Convection (4)

3.Results

The model that minimizes Equation (1) has a mass of 0.79 M, Zi of 0.0002, and αMLT = 1.6 Hp . However, as many models yield χ2 ≤ 1.0, the optimal parameters are more accurately determined by measuring the frequencies of values among all acceptable models. Because the mass and age estimates do not follow a normal distribution, the confidence interval cannot be calculated directly from the standard deviations. For large data sets, the sampling distribution of the studentized mean is approximately normal (Cook & Weisberg 1975). Consequently, Revised Best Estimates for the Age and Mass of the Methuselah Star HD 140283 Using MESA and Interferometry and Implications for 1D Convection (5) is used to construct the studentized error, representing a confidence interval of 95%.

We apply frequency statistics to parameters from all points of observational intersection: 198 tracks of 1659 total intersect at one or more timesteps (∼12%). This yields a 1σ mass and age for HD 140283 of 0.809 ± 0.001 M and 12.01 ± 0.05 Gyr, respectively.

As this analysis uses invariant physical assumptions, the uncertainties do not include contributions from modeling systematics. To provide more realistic estimates of global uncertainty, we replicate the numerical experiment using two different prescriptions for atmospheric surface boundary conditions:

  • 1.

    pre-computed photosphere tables based on Hauschildt et al. (1999a, 1999b)s PHOENIX models and Kurucz (2003); and

  • 2.

    Eddington t − τ integration (Eddington 1930);

likewise, two convective overshoot prescriptions: MESA's default "step" method and the "exponential" overshooting scheme described by Herwig (2000). These physics, along with heavy element diffusion, were identified as large sources of instrumental variance in the Dartmouth Stellar Evolution Program (DSEP) (Joyce & Chaboyer 2018a), MESA (Joyce et al. 2021, in preparation), and in other stellar evolution codes (Lebreton et al. 2014; Tanner et al. 2014). Presently, we relegate diffusion considerations to future work but strongly emphasize their importance. Results from tests across physical prescriptions revise our mass and age for HD 140283 to 0.81 ± 0.05 M and 12 ± 0.5 Gyr, respectively.

4.Discussion

Recently, Creevey et al. (2015) reported a best fitting mass and age of 0.780 ± 0.010 M and Revised Best Estimates for the Age and Mass of the Methuselah Star HD 140283 Using MESA and Interferometry and Implications for 1D Convection (6). Joyce & Chaboyer (2018a) found a best-fitting mass range of 0.74–0.79 M and a mass-dependent age range of 12.5–14.9 Gyr, with higher masses corresponding to lower ages. Karovicova et al. (2020) reported a best fitting mass of 0.77 ± 0.03 M. Our median mass and age are slightly higher and lower, respectively, than the results cited above but remain firmly consistent with recent literature and not in conflict with the universe's age.

Importantly, our models show sensitivity to the mixing length parameter, preferring values between 1.6 and 1.8Hp . By comparing the models' preferred αMLT against solar mixing length calibrations calculated under associated physical conditions, we find that HD 140283 requires a convective mixing length 10%–20% below the solar value. This result contributes to an increasing body of literature showing significantly sub-solar αMLT values are necessary to reproduce both the observed properties of metal-poor stars in general (e.g., Guenther & Demarque 2000; Tayar et al. 2017; Viani et al. 2018) and of HD 140283 specifically (Creevey et al. 2015; Joyce & Chaboyer 2018a).

Revised Best Estimates for the Age and Mass of the Methuselah Star HD 140283 Using MESA and Interferometry and Implications for 1D Convection (2024)
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