A plethora of new R Coronae Borealis stars discovered from a dedicated spectroscopic follow-up survey
P.Tisserand, G.C. Clayton, M.S. Bessell, D.L. Welch, D. Kamath, P.R., Wood, P. Wils, {\L}. Wyrzykowski, P. Mr\'oz, A.Udalski

TL;DR
This study significantly increased the known population of R Coronae Borealis stars by discovering 45 new stars through a dedicated spectroscopic survey, enhancing understanding of their properties and distribution.
Contribution
The paper presents the discovery of 45 new RCB stars using a novel spectroscopic follow-up method and refined criteria, expanding the known sample by about 50%.
Findings
Discovered 45 new RCB stars, including Cold, Warm, and hot types.
Increased the total known RCB stars in the Galaxy to 147.
Estimated no more than 500 RCB stars exist in the Milky Way.
Abstract
It is increasingly suspected that the rare R Coronae Borealis (RCB) stars - hydrogen-deficient and carbon-rich supergiant stars - are the products of mergers of CO/He white-dwarf binary systems in the intermediate mass regime (). Only 77 RCB stars are currently known in our Galaxy while up to 1000 were expected. It is necessary to find more of these peculiar and diverse stars to understand their origin and evolutionary path. We are undertaking such a dedicated search. We plan to follow up spectroscopically 2356 targets of interest that were carefully selected using the all sky 2MASS and WISE surveys. We have observed nearly 500 of these targets using optical low-resolution spectrographs. These spectra were compared to synthetic spectra from a new grid of MARCs hydrogen-deficient atmospheric models. Classical RCB stars' photospheric temperatures range mostly…
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