As part of our ongoing study of the evolved giants in the galactic halo, we consider the sample of 1286 long-period variables (LPVs) in the southern hemisphere provided by the… Click to show full abstract
As part of our ongoing study of the evolved giants in the galactic halo, we consider the sample of 1286 long-period variables (LPVs) in the southern hemisphere provided by the Catalina Sky Survey experiment. These LPVs have periods P > 80 days and amplitudes >0.2 mag. First, by using the Hamburg/ESO spectral survey, we aim to determine the spectral type as either M-type or C-type for objects located in the imprint of this survey, |b| > 30°. Of 135 LPVs obeying this selection, we classified 93, and found only two new carbon stars. Secondly, we consider faint LPVs. We discovered that many lie at ~1 arcmin from a bright Mira catalogued in the General Catalog of Variable Stars (GCVS) with identical period. We study these suspicious cases in detail, and conclude that for as many as 56 faint Catalina LPVs, their variability is due to contamination by light from the bright, neighboring GCVS Mira: an instrumental artefact. We conclude that when dealing with distant, faint Miras in the Catalina catalog, researchers should pay attention to the polluting effects of neighbouring bright and variable objects.
               
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