Symbiotic stars and other Halpha emission line stars towards the Galactic Bulge
Brent Miszalski (SAAO/SALT), Joanna Miko{\l}ajewska (NCAC Warsaw) and, Andrzej Udalski (Warsaw University Observatory)

TL;DR
This study systematically surveyed Halpha emission line stars in the Galactic Bulge, identifying 20 symbiotic stars and exploring their properties, variability, and potential as Type Ia supernova progenitors, with implications for understanding stellar populations.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive census of symbiotic stars towards the Galactic Bulge using deep spectroscopy and lightcurves, revealing new candidates and detailed classifications.
Findings
20 confirmed symbiotic stars identified
Discovery of a luminous Galactic Bulge carbon star H1-45
Diverse variability patterns observed in lightcurves
Abstract
Symbiotic stars are interacting binaries with the longest orbital periods and their multi-component structure makes them rich astrophysical laboratories. The accretion of a high mass loss rate red giant wind on to a white dwarf (WD) makes them promising Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) progenitors. Systematic surveys for new Galactic symbiotic stars are critical to identify new promising SNe Ia progenitors (e.g. RS Oph) and to better estimate the total population size to compare against SNe Ia rates. Central to the latter objective is building a complete census of symbiotic stars towards the Galactic Bulge. Here we report on the results of a systematic survey of Halpha emission line stars covering 35 deg^2. It is distinguished by the combination of deep optical spectroscopy and long-term lightcurves that improve the certainty of our classifications. A total of 20 bona-fide symbiotic stars…
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