Millimeter-wave Detections of Symbiotic Stars in SPT and ACT Data
C. Tandoi, A. Foster, T. J. Maccarone, A. J. Anderson, B. Ansarinejad, M. Archipley, L. Balkenhol, D. R. Barron, K. Benabed, A. N. Bender, B. A. Benson, F. Bianchini, L. E. Bleem, S. Bocquet, F. R. Bouchet, E. Camphuis, M. G. Campitiello, J. E. Carlstrom, J. Carron, C. L. Chang

TL;DR
This study detects and analyzes millimeter-wave emissions from symbiotic stars using SPT and ACT data, providing new insights into their physical properties and variability.
Contribution
First joint millimeter-wave detection of symbiotic stars using SPT and ACT, offering detailed light curves, spectral energy distributions, and variability analysis.
Findings
Detected 31 symbiotic stars with >3σ significance in millimeter wavelengths.
Provided multi-wavelength light curves and spectral energy distributions for each object.
Observed variability and lag in millimeter flux, indicating complex system dynamics.
Abstract
We present the results of a joint targeted search of candidate symbiotic stars at millimeter wavelengths using the South Pole Telescope (SPT) and the Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT). Candidates are selected from the New Online Database of Symbiotic Variables, restricting to objects that are within either the SPT-3G or ACT~DR6 footprint, covering most of the southern hemisphere and up to a declination of . Forced photometry on the 828 candidate symbiotic star locations in SPT and ACT data results in 31 unique objects detected with more than a significance using two frequency bands: 18 confirmed and 13 suspected symbiotic stars. We provide the SPT and ACT 95/98, 150, and 220~GHz light curves, along with optical and infrared light curves from 2016--2026, as well as spectral energy distributions, physical parameters from the literature, and brief summaries regarding…
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