New Herbig Ae/Be stars confirmed via high-resolution optical spectroscopy
A. Carmona (1), M.E. van den Ancker (2), M. Audard (1), Th. Henning, (3), J. Setiawan (3), and J. Rodmann (3) ((1) ISDC Science Data Centre &, Geneva Observatory, University of Geneva, (2) European Southern Observatory,, (3) Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, Heidelberg)

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution optical spectroscopy to confirm and classify 34 Herbig Ae/Be star candidates, distinguishing young stars from background giants and identifying new members of star-forming regions.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates the effectiveness of high-resolution optical spectroscopy in accurately identifying Herbig Ae/Be stars and differentiating them from evolved stars in emission-line star catalogs.
Findings
13 sources confirmed as Herbig Ae/Be stars
7 new probable members of star-forming regions
High-resolution spectroscopy improves classification accuracy
Abstract
We present FEROS high-resolution (R~45000) optical spectroscopy of 34 Herbig Ae/Be star candidates with previously unknown or poorly constrained spectral types. Within the sample, 16 sources are positionally coincident with nearby (d<250 pc) star-forming regions (SFRs). All the candidates have IR excess. We determine the spectral type and luminosity class of the sources, derive their radial and rotational velocities, and constrain their distances employing spectroscopic parallaxes. We confirm 13 sources as Herbig Ae/Be stars and find one classical T Tauri star. Three sources are emission line early-type giants and may be Herbig Ae/Be stars. One source is a main-sequence A-type star. Fourteen sources are post-main-sequence giant and supergiant stars. Two sources are extreme emission-line stars. Most of the sources appear to be background stars at distances over 700 pc. We show that…
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