Bibcode
Corradi, R. L. M.; Sabin, L.; Munari, U.; Cetrulo, G.; Englaro, A.; Angeloni, R.; Greimel, R.; Mampaso, A.
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 529, id.A56
Advertised on:
5
2011
Journal
Citations
10
Refereed citations
9
Description
Aims: We are performing a search for symbiotic stars using IPHAS,
the INT Hα survey of the northern Galactic plane, and follow-up
observations. Methods: 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. Results: The optical spectrum
shows the combination of a number of emission lines, among which are the
high-excitation species of [O iii], He ii, [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 [N ii]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 mag. Conclusions: 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.
Based on observations obtained with the 2.5 m INT and the 4.2 m WHT
telescopes of the Isaac Newton Group of Telescopes and the 1.5 m Carlos
Sanchez Telescope, operating on the islands of La Palma and Tenerife at
the Spanish Observatories of the Roque de Los Muchachos and Teide of the
Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias; the 2.1 m telescope at San
Pedro Martir, Mexico; and the GAPC 0.7 m Ritchey-Chrétien
telescope at La Polse di Cougnes, Udine, Italy.
Related projects
Bipolar Nebulae
This project has three major objectives: 1) To determine the physico-chemical characteristics of bipolar planetary nebulae and symbiotic nebulae, to help understanding the origin of bipolarity and to test theoretical models, mainly models with binary central stars, aimed at explaining the observed morphology and kinematics. 2) To study the low
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