Title: The search for symbiotic stars in IPHAS
1The search for symbiotic stars in IPHAS
- Romano L.M. Corradi 1,2
- Ernesto Rodriguez-Flores,
- Antonio Mampaso, Kerttu Viironen 2
- Robert Greimel 1
- 1 Isaac Newton Group of Telescopes, La Palma
- 2 Instituto de Astrofisica de Canarias, Tenerife
2Why symbiotic?
Called symbiotic because of their composite
spectrum (Cannon 1910)
Allen 1984 Proc. ASA 5 (3), 421
3Properties of symbiotic stars
- are the interacting binary stars with the
longest orbital periods
- composed of a hot compact star, usually a white
dwarf (WD) and a red giant (RG, usually of M-type)
- the binary system is detached ? no Roche lobe
overflow (some recent controversy about this)
- the WD accretes matter from the RG wind (d M /d
t 10-8 Msun yr-1)
- RG wind is partially ionized by the WD radiation
? strong Ha emission
- mass accretion is near the limit for
steady-state hydrogen burning on the WD surface
(? L 1000 Lsun) , but not exactly ? (recurrent)
thermonuclear runaways (slow novae) ? ejecta
(fast winds, jets, nebulae)
- S-type (80) RGB star, Porb 200-1000 days
- D-type (20) AGB star, Porb 20-500 (?) yrs,
extended nebulae
4Significance of the study of symbiotic stars to
Astronomy
- occurrence of thermonuclear outbursts under a
wide range of conditions - accretion on WDs and possible progenitors of
type Ia SNe - the effects of binarity on the pulsation
properties of highly evolved stars (Miras) - formation and destruction of dust and molecules
in hostile environments - late stages of stellar evolution in binary
systems ? formation of aspherical outflows (e.g.
link with bipolar planetary nebulae)
5Total population of symbiotic stars
BASICALLY UNKNOWN
- Estimated
- 3?103 Allen 1984
- 3?105 Munari y Renzini 1992
- 3?104 Kenyon et al. 1993
- 4?105 Magrini et al. 2003
- Known
- 173
6The search for symbiotics within IPHAS
takes advantage of the strong Ha emission, and
the presence of a bright cool star
7The IPHAS c-c diagram for symbiotics
Rodriguez-Flores 2006, Master Thesis, IAC
8Selection criteria for symbiotics
9The 2MASS c-c diagram for symbiotics
10Selection criteria for symbiotics
11First selection
- IPHAS photometric catalogue from observations
till Jan 2006 with rlt20 100 million
stellar-like objects - With r-Ha above the main-sequence locus (S-type
selection box) 4 million - Matched (lt1 arcsec) by objects in 2MASS
catalogue 700 000 - Observed AND identified twice (lt1 arcsec) in
IPHAS 178 544
12First selection
178 544 sources
13First selection
D-types, rlt16 59
14First selection
D-types, rlt18 374
15First selection
D-types, rlt20 1197
16First selection
S-types, rlt16 3366
17First selection
S-types, rlt18 18108
18First selection
S-types, rlt20 67363
19Adding a distance parameter
A weighted distance from the centres of the IPHAS
and 2MASS selection boxes defined by a suitable
metrics D w1 d2xIPHAS w2 d2yIPHAS w3
d2x2MASS w4 d2y2MASS (x and y not
orthogonal, follow the inclination of the sides
of the boxes wi are weights, which can be
further split into wi and wi- ) to be used as
a further criterion to select the best candidates
20Adding a distance parameter
21The first new symbiotics of IPHAS
22The first new symbiotics of IPHAS
IPHAS J202510.6435233 r 16.4 2.5mINTIDS 2006
23The first new symbiotics of IPHAS
24The first new symbiotics of IPHAS
IPHAS J185704.5002631 r 18.3 2.5mINTIDS 2006
25The first new symbiotics of IPHAS
26The first new symbiotics of IPHAS
IPHAS J183501.8014656 r 16.4 2.5mINTIDS last
Friday
27Summary
- IPHAS provides a powerful tool to detect new
symbiotic stars in the Galaxy - Best effectiveness when combined with 2MASS
- Thousands of candidates selected
- - Better control of bad measurements (e.g.
clouds) - - Selection criteria should be refined (avoid
star forming regions, add IRAS colours?) - Follow-up spectroscopy started, first 3 new
symbiotics discovered, investigation of possible
external collaborations (e.g. Asiago) to
continue the spectroscopy
28The IPHAS c-c diagram for symbiotics
29The IPHAS c-c diagram for symbiotics
30Hasta fines del 2004, en IPHAS sólo se observaron
5 (/?20) simbióticas Draco C1, ALS 2, AS 245,
MaC 1-9 y DQ Ser. Observaciones
complementarias Fecha 20 de abril, 17 y 18 de
septiembre/2005. Telescopio INT WFC (r, H?,
i) Objetos observados DB 21º 3873, Hen 2-374,
Hen 3-1341, YY Her, LT Del (2), V 1329 Cyg (2),
Hen 2-468, LL Cas, QW Sge, v 1016 Cyg, Z And, HM
Sge y V 471 Per. Varias observaciones de 5
estrellas simbióticas (AG Dra, AG Peg, AX Per, RX
Pup y Z And). Fotometría sintética a partir de
espectros (Mikolajewska 2005).
- Objetos de referencia (grupo 1)
- 67 nebulosas planetarias (NP)
- 121 estrellas variables tipo Mira (VMira)
- 43 estrellas B con líneas de emisión (Be)
- 83 estrellas variables cataclísmicas (VC)
31Two Micron All-Sky Survey (2MASS) junio 1997
febrero 2001
Telescopios 2 reflectores de 1.3 metros de
diámetro c/u (uno en c/hemisferio Mte. Hopkins
(Arizona) y CTIO (Chile )) Filtros J (1.25
?m), H (1.65 ?m) y Ks (2.17 ?m) Límites J lt
15.8, H lt 15.1 y Ks lt 14.3
Objetos de referencia (grupo 2)
- 285 nebulosas planetarias (NP)
- 121 estrellas variables tipo Mira (VMira)
- 76 estrellas B con líneas de emisión (Be)
- 95 estrellas variables cataclísmicas (VC)
...además de 187 de las 188 estrellas simbióticas
conocidas.