The Spitzer Atlas of Stellar Spectra
David R. Ardila, Schuyler D. Van Dyk, Wojciech Makowiecki, John, Stauffer, Inseok Song, Jeonghee Rho, Sergio Fajardo-Acosta, D.W. Hoard, and, Stefanie Wachter

TL;DR
The Spitzer Atlas of Stellar Spectra provides a comprehensive collection of mid-infrared spectra for 159 diverse stars, serving as a valuable reference for stellar classification and analysis in the infrared.
Contribution
This work offers the first uniform, publicly available mid-infrared spectral atlas covering a broad range of stellar types and luminosities, including rare objects like Wolf-Rayet stars.
Findings
Early-type stars have featureless spectra dominated by Hydrogen lines.
Late-type stars show water vapor, silicon monoxide, methane, and ammonia features.
Circumstellar gas and dust are evident in supergiant and transition star spectra.
Abstract
We present the Spitzer Atlas of Stellar Spectra (SASS), which includes 159 stellar spectra (5 to 32 mic; R~100) taken with the Infrared Spectrograph on the Spitzer Space Telescope. This Atlas gathers representative spectra of a broad section of the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram, intended to serve as a general stellar spectral reference in the mid-infrared. It includes stars from all luminosity classes, as well as Wolf-Rayet (WR) objects. Furthermore, it includes some objects of intrinsic interest, like blue stragglers and certain pulsating variables. All the spectra have been uniformly reduced, and all are available online. For dwarfs and giants, the spectra of early-type objects are relatively featureless, dominated by Hydrogen lines around A spectral types. Besides these, the most noticeable photospheric features correspond to water vapor and silicon monoxide in late-type objects and…
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