1,260 research outputs found
Tracking down R Coronae Borealis stars from their mid-infrared WISE colours
R Coronae Borealis stars (RCBs) are hydrogen-deficient and carbon-rich
supergiant stars. They are very rare, as only are actually known in
our Galaxy. Interestingly, RCBs are strongly suspected to be the evolved merger
product of two white dwarfs and could therefore be an important tool to
understand Supernovae type Ia in the double degenerate scenario. Constraints on
the spatial distribution and the formation rate of such stars are needed to
picture their origin and test it in the context of actual population synthesis
results. To do so, it is crucial to increase significantly the number of known
RCBs. With an absolute magnitude and a bright/hot
circumstellar shell made of amorphous carbon grains, RCBs are really
distinctive stars. Mono-epoch mid-infrared data can help us to discriminate
RCBs among other dust-producing stars. The aim is to produce from the WISE and
2MASS infrared catalogues a new catalogue of reasonable size, enriched with RCB
stars. Colour-Colour cuts used on all stars detected are the main selection
criteria. The selection efficiency was monitored using the 52 known RCBs. It
has been found that selection cuts in mid-infrared colour-colour diagrams are a
very efficient method of discriminating RCBs from other stars. An RCB enriched
catalogue made of only 1602 stars, with a high detection efficiency of about
77%, was produced. Spectral energy distributions of 49 known RCBs and 5 known
HdCs are also presented with estimates of their photosphere and circumstellar
shell temperatures. The newly released WISE all sky catalogue has proven to be
a valuable resource in finding RCB stars. Actual scenarios predict that between
100 and 500 RCBs exist in our Galaxy. The newly created RCB enriched catalogue
is an important step forward to significantly increase the number of known RCB
stars and therefore better understand their origin.Comment: 16 pages, 12 figures, Accepted in A&
Peculiar Hydrogen-deficient Carbon Stars: Strontium-Rich Stars and the s-Process
Context: R Coronae Borealis (RCB) variables and their non-variable
counterparts, the dustless Hydrogen-Deficient Carbon (dLHdC) stars have been
known to exhibit enhanced s-processed material on their surfaces, especially
Sr, Y, and Ba. No comprehensive work has been done to explore the s-process in
these types of stars, however one particular RCB star, U Aqr, has been under
scrutiny for its extraordinary Sr enhancement. Aims: We aim to identify RCB and
dLHdC stars that have significantly enhanced Sr abundances, such as U Aqr, and
use stellar evolution models to begin to estimate the type of neutron exposure
that occurs in a typical HdC star. Methods: We compare the strength of the Sr
II 4077 spectral line to Ca II H to identify the new subclass of Sr-rich
HdCs. We additionally use the structural and abundance information from
existing RCB MESA models to calculate the neutron exposure parameter,
Results: We identify six stars in the Sr-rich class. Two are RCBs, and four are
dLHdCs. We additionally find that the preferred RCB MESA model has a neutron
exposure ~ 0.1 mb, which is lower than the estimated
between 0.15 and 0.6 mb for the Sr-rich star U Aqr found in the
literature. We find trends in the neutron exposure corresponding to He-burning
shell temperature, metallicity, and assumed s-processing site. Conclusions: We
have found a sub-class of 6 HdCs known as the Sr-rich class, which tend to lie
in the halo, outside the typical distribution of RCBs and dLHdCs. We find that
dLHdC stars are more likely to be Sr-rich than RCBs, with an occurrence rate of
~13\% for dLHdCs and ~2\% for RCBs. This is one of the first potential
spectroscopic differences between RCBs and dLHdCs, along with dLHdCs having
stronger surface abundances of O.Comment: 8 pages, submitted to A&
AllBRICQS: the All-sky BRIght, Complete Quasar Survey
We describe the first results from the All-sky BRIght, Complete Quasar Survey
(AllBRICQS), which aims to discover the last remaining optically bright
quasars. We present 116 quasars (105 newly identified) having |b| > 10deg and
Gaia magnitudes brighter than B_P =16.5 or R_P =16 mag (plus another four at
slightly fainter magnitudes), which span a redshift range of z = 0.07 - 2.45.
The AllBRICQS sources have been selected by combining data from the Gaia and
WISE all-sky satellite missions, and we successfully identify quasars not
flagged as candidates by Gaia Data Release 3. We expect the completeness to be
approximately 96% within our magnitude and latitude limits, while the
preliminary results indicate a selection purity of approximately 97%. The
optical spectroscopy used for source classification will also enable detailed
quasar characterisation, including black hole mass measurements and
identification of foreground absorption systems. The AllBRICQS sources will
greatly enhance the number of quasars available for high-signal-to-noise
follow-up with present and future facilities.Comment: 23 pages. Submitted to PAS
A Spectral Classification System for Hydrogen-deficient Carbon Stars
Stellar spectral classification, and especially the Yerkes system, has been
highly useful in the study of stars. While there is a currently accepted
classification system for carbon stars, the subset of Hydrogen-deficient Carbon
(HdC) stars has not been well described by such a system, due in part to their
rarity and their variability. Here we present a new system for the
classification of HdCs based on their spectra, which is made wholly on their
observable appearance. We use a combination of dimensionality reduction and
clustering algorithms with human classification to create such a system. We
classify over half of the known sample of HdC stars using this, and roughly
calibrate the temperatures of each class using their colors. Additionally, we
express trends in the occurrence of certain spectral peculiarities such as the
presence of Hydrogen and Lithium lines. We also present three previously
unpublished spectra, and report the discovery of three new Galactic dustless
HdC (dLHdC) stars and additionally discuss one especially unique star that
appears to border between the hottest HdCs and the coolest Extreme Helium (EHe)
stars.Comment: 30 pages, 18 figures, submitted to MNRA
The accretion of a solar mass per day by a 17-billion solar mass black hole
Around a million quasars have been catalogued in the Universe by probing
deeper and using new methods for discovery. However, the hardest ones to find
seem to be the rarest and brightest specimen. In this work, we study the
properties of the most luminous of all quasars found so far. It has been
overlooked until recently, which demonstrates that modern all-sky surveys have
much to reveal. The black hole in this quasar accretes around one solar mass
per day onto an existing mass of 17 billion solar masses. In this process
its accretion disc alone releases a radiative energy of
Watts. If the quasar is not strongly gravitationally lensed, then its broad
line region (BLR) is expected to have the largest physical and angular diameter
occurring in the Universe, and will allow the Very Large Telescope
Interferometer to image its rotation and measure its black hole mass directly.
This will be an important test for BLR size-luminosity relations, whose
extrapolation has underpinned common black-hole mass estimates at high
redshift.Comment: This version of the article has been accepted for publication after
peer review and is subject to Springer Nature's AM terms of use, but is not
the Version of Record and does not reflect post-acceptance improvements, or
any corrections. The Version of Record is available online at
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41550-024-02195-
High-Resolution Spectroscopic Study of Extremely Metal-Poor Star Candidates from the SkyMapper Survey
The SkyMapper Southern Sky Survey is carrying out a search for the most
metal-poor stars in the Galaxy. It identifies candidates by way of its unique
filter set that allows for estimation of stellar atmospheric parameters. The
set includes a narrow filter centered on the Ca II K 3933A line, enabling a
robust estimate of stellar metallicity. Promising candidates are then confirmed
with spectroscopy. We present the analysis of Magellan-MIKE high-resolution
spectroscopy of 122 metal-poor stars found by SkyMapper in the first two years
of commissioning observations. 41 stars have [Fe/H] <= -3.0. Nine have [Fe/H]
<= -3.5, with three at [Fe/H] ~ -4. A 1D LTE abundance analysis of the elements
Li, C, Na, Mg, Al, Si, Ca, Sc, Ti, Cr, Mn, Co, Ni, Zn, Sr, Ba and Eu shows
these stars have [X/Fe] ratios typical of other halo stars. One star with low
[X/Fe]
[X/Fe values appears to be "Fe-enhanced," while another star has an extremely
large [Sr/Ba] ratio: >2. Only one other star is known to have a comparable
value. Seven stars are "CEMP-no" stars ([C/Fe] > 0.7, [Ba/Fe] < 0). 21 stars
exhibit mild r-process element enhancements (0.3 <=[Eu/Fe] < 1.0), while four
stars have [Eu/Fe] >= 1.0. These results demonstrate the ability to identify
extremely metal-poor stars from SkyMapper photometry, pointing to increased
sample sizes and a better characterization of the metal-poor tail of the halo
metallicity distribution function in the future.Comment: Minor corrections to text, missing data added to Tables 3 and 4;
updated to match published version. Complete tables included in sourc
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