R. Angeloni
Pontifical Catholic University of Chile
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Featured researches published by R. Angeloni.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2014
R. Angeloni; C. E. Ferreira Lopes; N. Masetti; F. Di Mille; P. Pietrukowicz; A. Udalski; Bradley E. Schaefer; P. Parisi; R. Landi; Camila Navarrete; Marcio Catelan; Thomas H. Puzia; Dani Guzman
Symbiotic stars are long-orbital-period interacting-binaries characterized by extended emission over the whole electromagnetic range and by complex photometric and spectroscopic variability. In this paper, the rst of a series, we present OGLE light curves of all the conrmed symbiotic stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud, with one exception. By careful visual inspection and combined time-series analysis techniques, we investigate for the rst time in a systematic way the photometric properties of these astrophysical objects, trying in particular to distinguish the nature of the cool component (e.g., Semi-Regular Variable vs. OGLE Small-Amplitude Red Giant), to provide its rst-order pulsational ephemerides, and to link all this information with the physical parameters of the binary system as a whole. Among the most interesting results, there is the discovery of a 20-year-long steady fading of Sanduleak’s star, a peculiar symbiotic star known to produce the largest stellar jet ever discovered. We discuss by means of direct examples the crucial need for long-term multi-band observations to get a real understanding of symbiotic and other interacting binary stars. We eventually introduce BOMBOLO, a multi-band simultaneous imager for the SOAR 4m Telescope, whose design and construction we are currently leading.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2012
R. Angeloni; F. Di Mille; C. E. Ferreira Lopes; N. Masetti
We report on the discovery of large-amplitude flickering from V648 Car (= SS73-17), a poorly studied object listed among the very few hard X-ray-emitting symbiotic stars. We performed millimagnitude precision optical photometry with the Swope Telescope at the Las Campanas Observatory, Chile, and found that V648 Car shows large U-band variability over timescales of minutes. To our knowledge, it exhibits some of the largest flickering of a symbiotic star ever reported. Our finding supports the hypothesis that symbiotic white dwarfs producing hard X-rays are predominantly powered by accretion, rather than quasi-steady nuclear burning, and have masses close to the Chandrasekhar limit. No significant periodicity is evident from the flickering light curve. The All Sky Automated Survey long-term V light curve suggests the presence of a tidally distorted giant accreting via Roche lobe overflow, and a binary period of {approx}520 days. On the basis of the outstanding physical properties of V648 Car as hinted at by its fast and long-term optical variability, as well as by its nature as a hard X-ray emitter, we therefore call for simultaneous follow-up observations in different bands, ideally combined with time-resolved optical spectroscopy.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2015
C. E. Ferreira Lopes; I. Dékány; Marcio Catelan; N. J. G. Cross; R. Angeloni; I. C. Leão; J. R. De Medeiros
Context. Stellar variability in the near-infrared (NIR) remains largely unexplored. The exploitation of public science archives with data-mining methods offers a perspective for a time-domain exploration of the NIR sky. Aims. We perform a comprehensive search for stellar variability using the optical-NIR multiband photometric data in the public Calibration Database of the WFCAM Science Archive (WSA), with the aim of contributing to the general census of variable stars and of extending the current scarce inventory of accurate NIR light curves for a number of variable star classes. Methods. Standard data-mining methods were applied to extract and fine-tune time-series data from the WSA. We introduced new variability indices designed for multiband data with correlated sampling, and applied them for preselecting variable star candidates, i.e., light curves that are dominated by correlated variations, from noise-dominated ones. Preselection criteria were established by robust numerical tests for evaluating the response of variability indices to the colored noise characteristic of the data. We performed a period search using the string-length minimization method on an initial catalog of 6551 variable star candidates preselected by variability indices. Further frequency analysis was performed on positive candidates using three additional methods in combination, in order to cope with aliasing. Results. We find 275 periodic variable stars and an additional 44 objects with suspected variability with uncertain periods or apparently aperiodic variation. Only 44 of these objects had been previously known, including 11 RR Lyrae stars on the outskirts of the globular cluster M 3 (NGC 5272). We provide a preliminary classification of the new variable stars that have well-measured light curves, but the variability types of a large number of objects remain ambiguous. We classify most of the new variables as contact binary stars, but we also find several pulsating stars, among which 34 are probably new field RR Lyrae, and 3 are likely Cepheids. We also identify 32 highly reddened variable objects close to previously known dark nebulae, suggesting that these are embedded young stellar objects. We publish our results and all light curve data as the WFCAM Variable Star Catalog.
arXiv: Solar and Stellar Astrophysics | 2018
P. Pietrukowicz; F. di Mille; R. Angeloni; A. Udalski
V735 Sgr was known as an enigmatic star with rapid brightness variations. Long-term OGLE photometry, brightness measurements in infrared bands, and recently obtained moderate resolution spectrum from the 6.5-m Magellan telescope show that this star is an active young stellar object of Herbig Ae/Be type.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2015
C. E. Ferreira Lopes; I. Dékány; Marcio Catelan; N. J. G. Cross; R. Angeloni; I. C. Leão; J. R. De Medeiros
Stellar variability in the near-infrared (NIR) remains largely unexplored. The exploitation of public science archives with data-mining methods offers a perspective for the time-domain exploration of the NIR sky. We perform a comprehensive search for stellar variability using the optical-NIR multi-band photometric data in the public Calibration Database of the WFCAM Science Archive (WSA), with the aim of contributing to the general census of variable stars, and to extend the current scarce inventory of accurate NIR light curves for a number of variable star classes. We introduce new variability indices designed for multi-band data with correlated sampling, and apply them for pre-selecting variable star candidates, i.e., light curves that are dominated by correlated variations, from noise-dominated ones. Pre-selection criteria are established by robust numerical tests for evaluating the response of variability indices to colored noise characteristic to the data. We find 275 periodic variable stars and an additional 44 objects with suspected variability with uncertain periods or apparently aperiodic variation. Only 44 of these objects had been previously known, including 11 RR~Lyrae stars in the outskirts of the globular cluster M3 (NGC~5272). We provide a preliminary classification of the new variable stars that have well-measured light curves, but the variability types of a large number of objects remain ambiguous. We classify most of the new variables as contact binary stars, but we also find several pulsating stars, among which 34 are probably new field RR~Lyrae and 3 are likely Cepheids. We also identify 32 highly reddened variable objects close to previously known dark nebulae, suggesting that these are embedded young stellar objects. We publish our results and all light-curve data as the WFCAM Variable Star Catalog.
In: {Guzik}, J A; {Chaplin}, W J; {Handler}, G; {Pigulski}, A. IAU Symposium; 2014. p. 395-396. | 2013
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
arXiv: Solar and Stellar Astrophysics | 2013
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; Ron Cohen; F. Mauro; J. Borissova; Pia Amigo; Susana Eyheramendy; K. Pichara; N. Espinoza; C. Navarro; G. Hajdu; D. N. Calderón Espinoza
The Astrophysical Journal | 2011
R. Angeloni; F. Di Mille; Joss Bland-Hawthorn; David J. Osip
arXiv: Astrophysics of Galaxies | 2011
Marcio Catelan; D. Minniti; P. W. Lucas; J. Alonso-García; R. Angeloni; J. C. Beamin; Charles Jose Bonatto; J. Borissova; C. Contreras; N. J. G. Cross; I. Dékány; James P. Emerson; Susana Eyheramendy; D. Geisler; E. Gonzalez-Solares; Kg Helminiak; M. Hempel; M. J. Irwin; V. D. Ivanov; Andrés Jordán; E. Kerins; R. Kurtev; F. Mauro; Cm Bidin; C. Navarrete; P Perez; K. Pichara; Mike Read; M. Rejkuba; Roy-Akira Saito
New Astronomy | 2011
M. Contini; R. Angeloni