Hunting for C-rich long-period variable stars in the Milky Way’s bar-bulge using unsupervised classification ofGaiaBP/RP spectra

Author:

Sanders Jason L1ORCID,Matsunaga Noriyuki2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physics and Astronomy, University College London , London WC1E 6BT, UK

2. Department of Astronomy, School of Science, The University of Tokyo , 7-3-1, Hongo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113-0033, Japan

Abstract

ABSTRACTThe separation of oxygen- and carbon-rich asymptotic giant branch sources is crucial for their accurate use as local and cosmological distance and age/metallicity indicators. We investigate the use of unsupervised learning algorithms for classifying the chemistry of long-period variables from Gaia DR3’s BP/RP spectra. Even in the presence of significant interstellar dust, the spectra separate into two groups attributable to O-rich and C-rich sources. Given these classifications, we utilize a supervised approach to separate O-rich and C-rich sources without blue and red photometers (BP/RP) spectra but instead given broadband optical and infrared photometry finding a purity of our C-rich classifications of around 95 per cent. We test and validate the classifications against other advocated colour–colour separations based on photometry. Furthermore, we demonstrate the potential of BP/RP spectra for finding S-type stars or those possibly symbiotic sources with strong emission lines. Although our classification suggests the Galactic bar-bulge is host to very few C-rich long-period variable stars, we do find a small fraction of C-rich stars with periods $\gt 250\, \mathrm{day}$ that are spatially and kinematically consistent with bar-bulge membership. We argue the combination of the observed number, the spatial alignment, the kinematics, and the period distribution disfavour young metal-poor star formation scenarios either in situ or in an accreted host, and instead, these stars are highly likely to be the result of binary evolution and the evolved versions of blue straggler stars already observed in the bar-bulge.

Funder

Royal Society

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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