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Dive into the research topics where C. Contreras Peña is active.

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Featured researches published by C. Contreras Peña.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2014

The VVV Templates Project Towards an automated classification of VVV light-curves - I. Building a database of stellar variability in the near-infrared

Rodolfo Angeloni; R. Contreras Ramos; Marcio Catelan; I. Dékány; F. Gran; J. Alonso-García; M. Hempel; C. Navarrete; H. Andrews; Antonio Aparicio; J. C. Beamin; C. Berger; J. Borissova; C. Contreras Peña; Andrea Cunial; R. de Grijs; Néstor Espinoza; Susana Eyheramendy; C. E. Ferreira Lopes; M. Fiaschi; G. Hajdu; J. Han; K. G. Hełminiak; A. Hempel; Sebastian L. Hidalgo; Yoshifusa Ita; Y. B. Jeon; Andrés Jordán; Jungmi Kwon; J. T. Lee

Context. The Vista Variables in the Via Lactea (VVV) ESO Public Survey is a variability survey of the Milky Way bulge and an adjacent section of the disk carried out from 2010 on ESO Visible and Infrared Survey Telescope for Astronomy (VISTA). The VVV survey will eventually deliver a deep near-IR atlas with photometry and positions in five passbands (ZY JHKS) and a catalogue of 1−10 million variable point sources – mostly unknown – that require classifications. Aims. The main goal of the VVV Templates Project, which we introduce in this work, is to develop and test the machine-learning algorithms for the automated classification of the VVV light-curves. As VVV is the first massive, multi-epoch survey of stellar variability in the near-IR, the template light-curves that are required for training the classification algorithms are not available. In the first paper of the series we describe the construction of this comprehensive database of infrared stellar variability. Methods. First, we performed a systematic search in the literature and public data archives; second, we coordinated a worldwide observational campaign; and third, we exploited the VVV variability database itself on (optically) well-known stars to gather high-quality infrared light-curves of several hundreds of variable stars. Results. We have now collected a significant (and still increasing) number of infrared template light-curves. This database will be used as a training-set for the machine-learning algorithms that will automatically classify the light-curves produced by VVV. The results of such an automated classification will be covered in forthcoming papers of the series.Context. The Vista Variables in the Via Lactea (VVV) ESO Public Survey is a variability survey of the Milky Way bulge and an adjacent section of the disk carried out from 2010 on ESO Visible and Infrared Survey Telescope for Astronomy (VISTA). The VVV survey will eventually deliver a deep near-IR atlas with photometry and positions in five passbands (ZYJHKS) and a catalogue of 1−10 million variable point sources – mostly unknown – that require classifications. Aims. The main goal of the VVV Templates Project, which we introduce in this work, is to develop and test the machine-learning algorithms for the automated classification of the VVV light-curves. As VVV is the first massive, multi-epoch survey of stellar variability in the near-IR, the template light-curves that are required for training the classification algorithms are not available. In the first paper of the series we describe the construction of this comprehensive database of infrared stellar variability. Methods. First, we performed a systematic search in the literature and public data archives; second, we coordinated a worldwide observational campaign; and third, we exploited the VVV variability database itself on (optically) well-known stars to gather high-quality infrared light-curves of several hundreds of variable stars. Results. We have now collected a significant (and still increasing) number of infrared template light-curves. This database will be used as a training-set for the machine-learning algorithms that will automatically classify the light-curves produced by VVV. The results of such an automated classification will be covered in forthcoming papers of the series.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2014

Extreme infrared variables from UKIDSS-I : A concentration in star-forming regions

C. Contreras Peña; P. W. Lucas; Dirk Froebrich; M. S. N. Kumar; J. Goldstein; Janet E. Drew; Andrew J. Adamson; Christopher J. Davis; G. Barentsen; N. J. Wright

We present initial results of the first panoramic search for high-amplitude near-infrared variability in theGalactic plane.We analyse the widely separated two-epoch K-band photometry in the fifth and seventh data releases of the UKIDSS Galactic plane survey.We find 45 stars with I´K > 1 mag, including two previously known OH/IR stars and a Nova. Even though the midplane is not yet included in the data set, we find the majority (66 per cent) of our sample to be within known star-forming regions (SFRs), with two large concentrations in the Serpens OB2 association (11 stars) and the Cygnus-X complex (12 stars). Sources in SFRs show spectral energy distributions that support classification as young stellar objects (YSOs). This indicates that YSOs dominate the Galactic population of high-amplitude infrared variable stars at low luminosities and therefore likely dominate the total high-amplitude population. Spectroscopic follow up of the DR5 sample shows at least four stars with clear characteristics of eruptive premain- sequence variables, two of which are deeply embedded. Our results support the recent concept of eruptive variability comprising a continuum of outburst events with different timescales and luminosities, but triggered by a similar physical mechanism involving unsteady accretion. Also, we find what appears to be one of the most variable classical Be stars. © 2014 The Authors Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017

A population of eruptive variable protostars in VVV

C. Contreras Peña; Philip W. Lucas; Dante Minniti; R. Kurtev; W. Stimson; C. Navarro Molina; J. Borissova; M. S.N. Kumar; M. A. Thompson; Tim M. Gledhill; R. Terzi; Dirk Froebrich; A. Caratti o Garatti

We present the discovery of 816 high-amplitude infrared variable stars (?Ks > 1 mag) in 119 deg2 of the Galactic mid-plane covered by the VISTA Variables in the Via Lactea (VVV) survey. Almost all are new discoveries and about 50?per?cent are young stellar objects (YSOs). This provides further evidence that YSOs are the commonest high-amplitude infrared variable stars in the Galactic plane. In the 2010–2014 time series of likely YSOs, we find that the amplitude of variability increases towards younger evolutionary classes (class I and flat-spectrum sources) except on short time-scales ( 100 d) and 162 short-term variables. Eruptive YSOs and faders tend to have the highest amplitudes and eruptive systems have the reddest spectral energy distribution (SEDs). Follow-up spectroscopy in a companion paper verifies high accretion rates in the eruptive systems. Variable extinction is disfavoured by the two epochs of colour data. These discoveries increase the number of eruptive variable YSOs by a factor of at least 5, most being at earlier stages of evolution than the known FUor and EXor types. We find that eruptive variability is at least an order of magnitude more common in class I YSOs than class II YSOs. Typical outburst durations are 1–4 yr, between those of EXors and FUors. They occur in 3–6 per cent of class I YSOs over a 4 yr time span.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017

Infrared spectroscopy of eruptive variable protostars from VVV

C. Contreras Peña; Philip W. Lucas; R. Kurtev; Dante Minniti; A. Caratti o Garatti; F. Marocco; M. A. Thompson; Dirk Froebrich; M. S.N. Kumar; W. Stimson; C. Navarro Molina; J. Borissova; Tim M. Gledhill; R. Terzi

In a companion work (Paper I), we detected a large population of highly variable Young Stellar Objects (YSOs) in the Vista Variables in the Via Lactea (VVV) survey, typically with class I or flat spectrum spectral energy distributions and diverse light-curve types. Here we present infrared spectra (0.9–2.5??m) of 37 of these variables, many of them observed in a bright state. The spectra confirm that 15/18 sources with eruptive light curves have signatures of a high accretion rate, either showing EXor-like emission features (?v = 2 CO, Br?) and/or FUor-like features (?v = 2 CO and H2O strongly in absorption). Similar features were seen in some long-term periodic YSOs and faders but not in dippers or short-term variables. The sample includes some dusty Mira variables (typically distinguished by smooth Mira-like light curves), two cataclysmic variables and a carbon star. In total, we have added 19 new objects to the broad class of eruptive variable YSOs with episodic accretion. Eruptive variable YSOs in our sample that were observed at bright states show higher accretion luminosities than the rest of the sample. Most of the eruptive variables differ from the established FUor and EXor subclasses, showing intermediate outburst durations and a mixture of their spectroscopic characteristics. This is in line with a small number of other recent discoveries. Since these previously atypical objects are now the majority amongst embedded members of the class, we propose a new classification for them as MNors. This term (pronounced emnor) follows V1647 Ori, the illuminating star of McNeils Nebula.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2018

VIRAC: The VVV Infrared Astrometric Catalogue

Leigh Smith; Philip W. Lucas; R. Kurtev; R. L. Smart; D. Minniti; J. Borissova; Hugh R. A. Jones; Zhoujian Zhang; F. Marocco; C. Contreras Peña; M. Gromadzki; Michael A. Kuhn; Janet E. Drew; D. J. Pinfield; L. R. Bedin

© 2017 The Authors. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.


The Astronomical Journal | 2016

YOUNG STELLAR CLUSTERS CONTAINING MASSIVE YOUNG STELLAR OBJECTS IN THE VVV SURVEY

J. Borissova; S. Ramírez Alegría; J. Alonso; Philip W. Lucas; R. Kurtev; N. Medina; C. Navarro; Michael A. Kuhn; M. Gromadzki; G. Retamales; M. A. Fernandez; C. Agurto-Gangas; André-Nicolas Chené; Dante Minniti; C. Contreras Peña; Marcio Catelan; I. Decany; M. A. Thompson; E. F. E. Morales; P. Amigo

This is an author-created, un-copyedited version of an article published in The Astronomical Journal. IOP Publishing is not responsible for any errors or omissions in this version of the manuscript or any version derived from it. The Version of Record is available online at: at doi: https://doi.org/10.3847/0004-6256/152/3/74.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016

Discovery of a long-lived, high-amplitude dusty infrared transient

C.T. Britt; Thomas J. Maccarone; Joel D. Green; P. G. Jonker; Robert I. Hynes; Manuel A. P. Torres; Jay Strader; Laura Chomiuk; R. Salinas; Philip W. Lucas; C. Contreras Peña; R. Kurtev; Craig O. Heinke; Leigh Smith; N. J. Wright; Christopher B. Johnson; D. Steeghs; G. Nelemans

We report the detection of an infrared-selected transient which has lasted at least five years, first identified by a large mid-infrared and optical outburst from a faint X-ray source detected with the Chandra X-ray Observatory. In this paper we rule out several scenarios for the cause of this outburst, including a classical nova, a luminous red nova, AGN flaring, a stellar merger, and intermediate luminosity optical transients, and interpret this transient as the result of a young stellar object (YSO) of at least solar mass accreting material from the remains of the dusty envelope from which it formed, in isolation from either a dense complex of cold gas or massive star formation. This object does not fit neatly into other existing categories of large outbursts of YSOs (FU Orionis types) which may be a result of the objects mass, age, and environment. It is also possible that this object is a new type of transient unrelated to YSOs.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017

Extreme infrared variables from UKIDSS – II. An end-of-survey catalogue of eruptive YSOs and unusual stars

Philip W. Lucas; Leigh Smith; C. Contreras Peña; Dirk Froebrich; Janet E. Drew; M. S.N. Kumar; J. Borissova; Dante Minniti; R. Kurtev; M. Monguió

We present a catalogue of 618 high amplitude infrared variable stars (1 < DeltaK < 5 mag) detected by the two widely separated epochs of 2.2 um data in the UKIDSS Galactic plane survey, from searches covering 1470 deg^2. Most were discovered by a search of all fields at 30 < l < 230 deg. Sources include new dusty Mira variables, three new CV candidates, a blazar and a peculiar source that may be an interacting binary system. However, c. 60 per cent are YSOs, based on spatial association with star forming regions at distances ranging from 300 pc to over 10 kpc. This confirms our initial result in Contreras Pena et al.(Paper I) that YSOs dominate the high amplitude infrared variable sky in the Galactic disc. It is also supported by recently published VVV results at 295 < l < 350 deg. The spectral energy distributions of the YSOs indicate class I or flat spectrum systems in most cases, as in the VVV sample. A large number of variable YSOs are associated with the Cygnus X complex and other groups are associated with the North America/Pelican nebula, the Gemini OB1 molecular cloud, the Rosette complex, the Cone nebula, the W51 star forming region and the S86 and S236 HII regions. Most of the YSO variability is likely due to variable/episodic accretion on timescales of years, albeit usually less extreme than classical FUors and EXors. Luminosities at the 2010 WISE epoch range from c. 0.1 Lsun to 10^3 Lsun but only rarely exceed 10^2.5 Lsun.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2018

Photometric variability of massive young stellar objects. I.

G. D. C. Teixeira; M. S. N. Kumar; Leigh Smith; P. W. Lucas; C. Morris; J. Borissova; M. J. P. F. G. Monteiro; A. Caratti o Garatti; C. Contreras Peña; Dirk Froebrich; J. F. Gameiro

The VVV survey has allowed for an unprecedented number of multi-epoch observations of the southern Galactic plane. In a recent paper,13 massive young stellar objects(MYSOs) have already been identified within the highly variable(\Delta Ks > 1 mag) YSO sample of another published work.This study aims to understand the general nature of variability in MYSOs.We present the first systematic study of variability in a large sample of candidate MYSOs.We examined the data for variability of the putative driving sources of all known Spitzer EGOs and bright 24 \mu m sources coinciding with the peak of 870 \mu m detected ATLASGAL clumps, a total of 718 targets. Of these, 190 point sources (139 EGOs and 51 non-EGOs) displayed variability (IQR > 0.05, \Delta Ks > 0.15 mag). Light-curves(LCs) have been sub-classified into eruptive, dipper, fader, short-term-variable and long-period variable-YSO categories.Lomb-Scargle periodogram analysis of periodic LCs was carried out. 1 - 870 \mu m spectral energy distributions of the variable sources were fitted with YSO models to obtain representative properties. 41% of the variable sources are represented by > 4Msun objects, and only 6% by > 8Msun objects.The highest-mass objects are mostly non-EGOs,deeply embedded.By placing them on the HR diagram we show that most lower mass,EGO type objects are concentrated on the putative birth-line position, while the luminous non-EGO type objects group around the ZAMS track.Some of the most luminous far infrared sources in the massive clumps and infrared quiet driving sources of EGOs have been missed out by this study owing to an uniform sample selection method.A high rate of detectable variability in EGO targets (139 out of 153 searched) implies that near-infrared variability in MYSOs is closely linked to the accretion phenomenon and outflow activity.


In: {Guzik}, J A; {Chaplin}, W J; {Handler}, G; {Pigulski}, A. IAU Symposium; 2014. p. 395-396. | 2013

Stellar variability in the VVV survey : Overview and first results

Marcio Catelan; D. Minniti; P. W. Lucas; I. Dékány; Roy-Akira Saito; R. Angeloni; J. Alonso-García; M. Hempel; Kg Helminiak; Andrés Jordán; R. Contreras Ramos; C. Navarrete; J. C. Beamin; A. F. Rojas; F. Gran; C. E. Ferreira Lopes; C. Contreras Peña; E. Kerins; Leo Huckvale; M. Rejkuba; Roger E. Cohen; F. Mauro; J. Borissova; Pia Amigo; Susana Eyheramendy; K. Pichara; N. Espinoza; C. Navarro; G. Hajdu; D. N. Calderón Espinoza

The Vista Variables in the V´oa Lactea (VVV) ESO Public Survey is an ongoing time-series, near-infrared (IR) survey of the Galactic bulge and an adjacent portion of the inner disk, covering 562 square degrees of the sky, using ESOs VISTA telescope. The survey has provided su- perb multi-color photometry in 5 broadband filters (Z, Y , J, H, and Ks), leading to the best map of the inner Milky Way ever obtained, par- ticularly in the near-IR. The main variability part of the survey, which is focused on Ks-band observations, is currently underway, with bulge fields having been observed between 31 and 70 times, and disk fields be- tween 17 and 36 times. When the survey is complete, bulge (disk) fields

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Philip W. Lucas

University of Hertfordshire

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R. Kurtev

Valparaiso University

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Leigh Smith

University of Hertfordshire

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Marcio Catelan

Pontifical Catholic University of Chile

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P. W. Lucas

University of Hertfordshire

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F. Marocco

University of Hertfordshire

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Janet E. Drew

University of Hertfordshire

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M. A. Thompson

University of Hertfordshire

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