An infrared census of R Coronae Borealis Stars II -- Spectroscopic classifications and implications for the rate of low-mass white dwarf mergers
Viraj R. Karambelkar, Mansi M. Kasliwal, Patrick Tisserand, Shreya, Anand, Michael C. B. Ashley, Lars Bildsten, Geoffrey C. Clayton, Courtney C., Crawford, Kishalay De, Nicholas Earley, Matthew J. Hankins, Xander Hall,, Astrid Lamberts, Ryan M. Lau, Dan McKenna, Anna Moore

TL;DR
This study conducts an infrared survey of R Coronae Borealis stars in the Milky Way, identifying new stars, estimating their total population, and analyzing their pulsations to understand their origins and merger rates.
Contribution
It provides the first large-scale infrared census of RCB stars, estimates their total number in the Milky Way, and links their formation rate to white dwarf merger events.
Findings
Approximately 350 RCB stars in the Milky Way.
Estimated RCB formation rate of 0.8-5 x 10^-3 per year.
Identification of 3 new and 12 candidate DY Per stars.
Abstract
We present results from a systematic infrared (IR) census of R Coronae Borealis (RCB) stars in the Milky Way, using data from the Palomar Gattini IR (PGIR) survey. R Coronae Borealis stars are dusty, erratic variable stars presumably formed from the merger of a He-core and a CO-core white dwarf (WD). PGIR is a 30 cm -band telescope with a 25 deg camera that surveys 18000 deg of the northern sky () at a cadence of 2 days. Using PGIR J-band lightcurves for 60 million stars together with mid-IR colors from WISE, we selected a sample of 530 candidate RCB stars. We obtained near-IR spectra for these candidates and identified 53 RCB stars in our sample. Accounting for our selection criteria, we find that there are a total of RCB stars in the Milky Way. Assuming typical RCB lifetimes, this corresponds to an RCB formation rate of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
