We are performing a search for symbiotic stars using IPHAS, the INT Halpha
survey of the northern Galactic plane, and follow-up observations. Candidate
symbiotic stars are selected on the basis of their IPHAS and near-IR colours,
and spectroscopy and photometry are obtained to determine their nature. We
present here observations of the symbiotic star candidate IPHAS
J205836.43+503307.2. The optical spectrum shows the combination of a number of
emission lines, among which are the high-excitation species of [OIII], HeII,
[Ca V], and [Fe VII], and a red continuum with the features of a star at the
cool end of the carbon star sequence. The nebular component is spatially
resolved: the analysis of the spatial profile of the [NII]6583 line in the
spectrum indicates a linear size of ~2.5 arcsec along the east-west direction.
Its velocity structure suggests an aspherical morphology. The near-infrared
excess of the source, which was especially strong in 1999, indicated that a
thick circumstellar dust shell was also present in the system. The carbon star
has brightened in the last decade by two to four magnitudes at red and
near-infrared wavelengths. Photometric monitoring during a period of 60 days
from November 2010 to January 2011 reveals a slow luminosity decrease of 0.2
magnitudes. From the observed spectrophotometric properties and variability, we
conclude that the source is a new Galactic symbiotic star of the D-type, of the
rare kind that contains a carbon star, likely a carbon Mira. Only two other
systems of this type are known in the Galaxy.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure