V532 Oph is a New R Coronae Borealis Star
Geoffrey C. Clayton (LSU), D. Kilkenny (Univ. of the Western Cape), P., Wils (Vereniging Voor Sterrenkunde), D.L. Welch (McMaster Univ.)

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery that V532 Oph is a new R Coronae Borealis star, demonstrating the effectiveness of high-cadence photometric surveys in identifying rare stellar objects and contributing to understanding stellar evolution.
Contribution
The paper provides new photometric and spectroscopic evidence classifying V532 Oph as an RCB star, highlighting the role of all-sky surveys in discovering such rare objects.
Findings
V532 Oph exhibits characteristic RCB star lightcurve declines.
Spectroscopic data confirms the star's hydrogen deficiency and temperature.
Infrared excess indicates circumstellar dust presence.
Abstract
V532 Oph has been found to be a member of the rare, hydrogen-deficient R Coronae Borealis (RCB) stars from new photometric and spectroscopic data reported in this paper. The lightcurve of V532 Oph shows the sudden, deep, irregularly spaced declines characteristic of RCB stars. Its optical spectrum is typical of a warm (T(eff)~7000 K) RCB star, showing weak or absent hydrogen lines, the C2 Swan bands, and no evidence for 13C. In addition, the star shows small pulsations typical of an RCB star and an infrared excess due to circum- stellar dust. It also appears to be significantly reddened by foreground dust. The distance to V532 Oph is estimated to be 5.5-8.7 kpc. These new data show that this star was misclassified as an eclipsing binary in the General Catalog of Variable Stars. The new data presented here for V532 Oph reveal the power of high-quality, high-cadence all-sky photometric…
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