A GLIMPSE into the Nature of Galactic Mid-IR Excesses
B. Uzpen, H.A. Kobulnicky, D.R. Semler, T. Bensby, and C. Thom

TL;DR
This study investigates the nature of mid-infrared excesses in intermediate-mass stars, identifying their origins as either circumstellar disks or free-free emission, and characterizing their properties and evolutionary states.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the sources of IR excess in intermediate-mass stars, distinguishing between dust and free-free emission, and identifying candidate disk types and stellar evolutionary stages.
Findings
Six stars' IR excess explained by free-free emission, likely classical Be stars.
Nine stars show IR excess due to circumstellar dust, possibly pre-main-sequence or transitional disks.
Identification of warm debris disk candidates and transition disk candidates based on IR colors and Halpha features.
Abstract
We investigate the nature of the mid-IR excess for 31 intermediate-mass stars that exhibit an 8 micron excess in either the Galactic Legacy Infrared Mid-Plane Survey Extraordinaire or the Mid-Course Space Experiment using high resolution optical spectra to identify stars surrounded by warm circumstellar dust. From these data we determine projected stellar rotational velocities and estimate stellar effective temperatures for the sample. We estimate stellar ages from these temperatures, parallactic distances, and evolutionary models. Using MIPS [24] measurements and stellar parameters we determine the nature of the infrared excess for 19 GLIMPSE stars. We find that 15 stars exhibit Halpha emission and four exhibit Halpha absorption. Assuming that the mid-IR excesses arise in circumstellar disks, we use the Halpha fluxes to model and estimate the relative contributions of dust and…
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