Accurate atmospheric parameters and chemical composition of stars play a vital role in characterizing physical parameters of exoplanetary systems and understanding of their formation. A full asteroseismic characterization of a star is also possible if its main atmospheric parameters are known. The NASA Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) space telescope will play a very important role in searching of exoplanets around bright stars and stellar asteroseismic variability research. We have observed all 302 bright (V<8mag) and cooler than F5 spectral class stars in the northern TESS continuous viewing zone with a 1.65m telescope at the Moletai Astronomical Observatory of Vilnius University and the high-resolution Vilnius University Echelle Spectrograph. We uniformly determined the main atmospheric parameters, ages, orbital parameters, velocity components, and precise abundances of 24 chemical species (C(C2), N(CN), [OI], NaI, MgI, AlI, SiI, SiII, CaI, CaII, ScI, ScII, TiI, TiII, VI, CrI, CrII, MnI, FeI, FeII, CoI, NiI, CuI, and ZnI) for 277 slowly rotating single stars in the field. About 83% of the sample stars exhibit the Mg/Si ratios greater than 1.0 and may potentially harbor rocky planets in their systems.
Cone search capability for table J/ApJS/248/19/tablea1 (Stellar properties of the investigated stars)