A new way to find symbiotic stars: accretion disc detection with continuum survey photometry
A. B. Lucy, J. L. Sokoloski, G. J. M. Luna, K. Mukai, N. E. Nu\~nez, D. A. H. Buckley, H. Breytenbach, B. Paul, S. B. Potter, R. Manick, D. A. Howell, C. Wolf, and C. A. Onken

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel photometric method using SkyMapper survey data to identify symbiotic stars by detecting accretion disc flickering, revealing a larger population than previous narrow-band Hα surveys.
Contribution
The study presents a new technique for finding symbiotic stars through continuum survey photometry and variability analysis, expanding detection capabilities beyond traditional methods.
Findings
Discovered 12 new symbiotics, including 4 with optical flickering.
Identified 10 symbiotic candidates and confirmed flickering in V1044 Cen.
At least 20% of symbiotics show detectable optical flickering.
Abstract
Symbiotic stars are binaries in which a cool and evolved star of luminosity class I-III accretes onto a smaller companion. However, direct accretion signatures like disc flickering and boundary layer X-rays are typically outshone or suppressed by the luminous giant, shell burning on the accreting white dwarf, and the illuminated wind nebula. We present a new way to find symbiotics that is less biased against directly-detectable accretion discs than methods based on narrow-band H photometry or objective prism plate surveys. We identified outliers in SkyMapper survey photometry, using reconstructed uvg snapshot colours and rapid variability among the three exposures of each 20-minute SkyMapper Main Survey filter sequence, from a sample of 366,721 luminous red objects. We found that SkyMapper catalog colours of large-amplitude pulsating giants must be corrected for variability, and…
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