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Examinando por Autor "Holgado, G."

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    A giant exoplanet orbiting a very-low-mass star challenges planet formation models
    (American Association for the Advancement of Science, 2019-09-27) Morales, J. C.; Mustill, A. J.; Ribas, I.; Davies, M. B.; Reiners, A.; Bauer, F. F.; Kossakowski, D.; Herrero, Enrique; Rodríguez, E.; López González, M. J.; Rodríguez López, C.; Stock, S.; Zechmeister, M.; Luque, R.; Gesa, L.; Pedraz, S.; Baroch, D.; Sarkis, P.; Lafarga, M.; Johnson, E. N.; Anglada Escudé, G.; González Álvarez, E.; Perryman, M. A. C.; Dreizler, S.; Sarmiento, L. F.; Tal Or, L.; Labarga, F.; Reffert, S.; Rebolo, R.; Schweitzer, A.; Schäfer, S.; Hagen, H. J.; Lázaro, F. J.; Quirrenbach, A.; Perger, M.; Guenther, E. W.; Schlecker, M.; Montes, D.; Jeffers, S. V.; Cortés Contreras, M.; Kürster, M.; Schmitt, J. H. M. M.; Aceituno, Francisco José; Abellán, F. J.; Rosich, A.; Aceituno, J.; Schöfer, P.; Arroyo Torres, B.; Amado, P. J.; Antona, R.; Solano, Enrique; Benítez, D.; Kaminski, A.; Becerril Jarque, S.; Sota, A.; Kehr, M.; Abril, M.; Brinkmöller, M.; Béjar, V. J. S.; Ammler von Eiff, M.; Calvo Ortega, R.; Zapatero Osorio, M. R.; Barrado, D.; Cardona Guillén, C.; Yan, F.; Bergond, G.; Casanova, V.; Klahr, H.; Chaturvedi, P.; Nagel, E.; Claret, A.; Trifonov, T.; Czesla, S.; Henning, T.; Dorda, R.; Seifert, W.; Fernández Hernández, Maite; Alonso Floriano, F. J.; Azzaro, M.; Berdiñas, Z. M.; Del Burgo, C.; Cano, J.; Carro, J.; Casasayas Barris, N.; Cifuentes, C.; Colomé, J.; Díez Alonso, E.; Emsenhuber, A.; Guàrdia, J.; Guijarro, A.; De Guindos, E.; Hatzes, Artie; Hauschildt, P. H.; Hedrosa, R. P.; Hermelo, I.; Hernández Arabi, R.; Hernández Otero, F.; Hintz, D.; Klüter, J.; González Peinado, R.; González Hernández, J. I.; González Cuesta, L.; De Juan, E.; Stahl, O.; Burn, R.; Kim, M.; Fernández Martín, A.; Lara, L. M.; Mordasini, C.; Labiche, N.; Cárdenas, M. C.; Lampón, M.; Ferro, I. M.; López del Fresno, M.; Passegger, V. M.; Lizon, Jean Louis; Casal, E.; Lodieu, N.; Fuhrmeister, B.; Mancini, L.; López Santiago, J.; Kemmer, J.; Mall, U.; Galadí Enríquez, D.; Martín Fernández, P.; Marfil, E.; Lalitha, S.; Martín, Eduardo L.; Gallardo Cava, I.; Mirabet, E.; Llamas, M.; Marvin, E. L.; García Vargas, M. L.; Nortmann, L.; Magán Madinabeitia, H.; Nelson, Richard; García Piquer, A.; Pallé, E.; Marín Molina, J. A.; Pascual Granado, J.; Caballero, J. A.; Martínez Rodríguez, H.; Pérez Medialdea, D.; Huke, P.; Naranjo, V.; Rabaza, O.; Huber, A.; Ofir, A.; Redondo, P.; Holgado, G.; Rodler, F.; Klutsch, A.; Sabotta, S.; Launhardt, R.; Salz, M.; López Salas, F. J.; Sánchez Carrasco, M. A.; Mandel, H.; Sanz Forcada, J.; Martín Ruiz, S.; Moya, A.; Nowak, G.; Pavlov, Alexander; Pérez Calpena, A.; Ramón Ballesta, A.; Rix, H. W.; Rodríguez Trinidad, A.; Sadegi, S.; Sánchez Blanco, E.; Sánchez López, A.; Stürmer, J.; Suárez, J. C.; Tabernero, H. M.; Tulloch, S. M.; Veredas, G.; Vico Linares, J. I.; Vilardell, F.; Wagner, K.; Winkler, J.; Wolthoff, V.; Johansen, A.; Stuber, T.; Israel Science Foundation (ISF); Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Científico y Tecnológico (FONDECYT); Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF); Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt (DLR); Ministero dell'Istruzione, dell'Università e della Ricerca (MIUR); European Research Council (ERC); Generalitat de Catalunya; Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG); Queen Mary University of London; Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología (CONACYT); Unidad de Excelencia Científica María de Maeztu Centro de Astrobiología del Instituto Nacional de Técnica Aeroespacial y CSIC, MDM-2017-0737; Morales, J. C. [0000-0003-0061-518X]; Mustill, A. J. [0000-0002-2086-3642]; Ribas, I. [0000-0002-6689-0312]; Davies, M. B. [0000-0001-6080-1190]; Bauer, F. F. [0000-0003-1212-5225]; Herrrero, E. [0000-0001-8602-6639]; Rodríguez, E. [0000-0001-6827-9077]; López González, M. J. [0000-0001-8104-5128]; Rodríguez López, C. [0000-0001-5559-7850]; López González, M. J. [0000-0001-8104-5128]; Rodríguez López, C. [0000-0001-5559-7850]; Sarkis, P. [0000-0001-8128-3126]; López Santiago, J. [0000-0003-2402-8166]; Vilardell, F. [0000-0003-0441-1504]; Winkler, J. [0000-0003-0568-8820]; Nowak, G. [0000-0002-7031-7754]; Béjar, V. J. S. [0000-0002-5086-4232]; Luque, R. [0000-0002-4671-2957]; Pérez Calpena, A. [0000-0001-7361-9240]; Sota, A. [https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9404-6952]; Klahr, H. [0000-0002-8227-5467]; Mordasini, C. [0000-0002-1013-2811]; Rodler, F. [0000-0003-0650-5723]; Tabernero, H. [0000-0002-8087-4298]; Cortés Contreras, M. [0000-0003-3734-9866]; Lafarga, M. [0000-0002-8815-9416]; Sánchez López, A. [0000-0002-0516-7956]; Yan, F. [0000-0001-9585-9034]; Reffert, S. [0000-0002-0460-8289]; Rosich, A. [0000-0002-9141-3067]; Sarmiento, L. F. [0000-0002-8475-9705]; Perger, M. [0000-0001-7098-0372]; Sabotta, S. [0000-0001-9078-5574]; Guenther, E. W. [0000-0002-9130-6747]; Kaminski, A. [0000-0003-0203-8208]; Schmitt, J. H. M. M. [0000-0003-2554-9916]; Aceituno, J. [0000-0003-0487-1105]; Alonso Floriano, F. J. [0000-0003-1202-5734]; Stock, S. [0000-0002-1166-9338]; Nagel, E. [0000-0002-4019-3631]; Barrado, D. [0000-0002-5971-9242]; Tulloch, S. [0000-0003-0840-8521]; Trifonov, T. [0000-0002-0236-775X]; Bergond, G. [0000-0003-3132-9215]; Burn, R. [0000-0002-9020-7309]; Zapatero Osorio, M. R. [0000-0001-5664-2852]; Montes, D. [0000-0002-7779-238X]; Cano, J. [0000-0003-1984-5401]; Cardona Guillén, C. [0000-0002-2198-4200]; Baroch, D. [0000-0001-7568-5161]; Ammler-von Eiff, M. [0000-0001-9565-1698]; Chaturvedi, P. [0000-0002-1887-1192]; Cifuentes, C. [0000-0003-1715-5087]; Anglada Escudé, G. [0000-0002-3645-5977]; Becerril Jarque, S. [0000-0001-9009-1150]; González Cuesta, L. [0000-0002-1241-5508]; Díez Alonso, E. [0000-0002-5826-9892]; Emsenhuber, A. [0000-0002-8811-1914]; Passegger, V. M. [0000-0002-8569-7243]; García Vargas, M. L. [0000-0002-2058-3528]; González Álvarez, E. [0000-0002-4820-2053]; Amado, P. J. [0000-0002-8388-6040]; Carro, J. [0000-0002-0838-3603]; Guàrdia, J. [0000-0002-7191-9001]; Abellán, F. J. [0000-0002-5724-1636]; Colomé, J. [0000-0002-1678-2241]; Hermelo, I. [0000-0001-9178-694X]; Hintz, D. [0000-0002-5274-2589]; Arroyo Torres, B. [0000-0002-3392-4694]; Fuhrmeister, B. [0000-0001-8321-5514]; Johnson, E. [0000-0003-2260-5134]; De Juan Fernández, E. [0000-0002-9382-4505]; Berdiñas, Z. M. [0000-0002-6057-6461]; González Hernández, J. I. [0000-0002-0264-7356]; Klüter, J. [0000-0002-3469-5133]; Klutsch, A. [0000-0001-7869-3888]; Calvo Ortega, R. [0000-0003-3693-6030]; Guijarro, A. [0000-0001-5518-1759]; Aceituno, F. J. [0000-0001-8074-4760]; Lara, L. M. [0000-0002-7184-920X]; Launhardt, R. [0000-0002-8298-2663]; Casasayas Barris, N. [0000-0002-2891-8222]; López del Fresno, M. [0000-0002-9479-7780]; Magan Madinabeitia, H. [0000-0003-1243-4597]; Czesla, S. [0000-0002-4203-4773]; Kehr, M. [0000-0002-7420-7368]; Marín Molina, J. A. [0000-0002-3525-0806]; Galadí Enríquez, D. [0000-0003-4946-5653]; Labarga, F. [0000-0002-7143-0206]; Martínez Rodríguez, H. [0000-0002-1919-228X]; Marvin, C. J. [0000-0002-2249-2611]; González Peinado, R. [0000-0002-6658-8930]; Lizon, J. L. [0000-0001-8928-2566]; Naranjo, V. [0000-0003-0097-1061]; Nelson, R. [0000-0002-9687-8779]; De Guindos, E. [0000-0002-8124-9101]; Manici, L. [0000-0002-9428-8732]; Ofir, A. [0000-0002-9152-5042]; Pascual Granado, J. [0000-0003-0139-6951]; Huke, P. [0000-0001-5913-2743]; Martín, E. [0000-0002-1208-4833]; García Piquer, A. [0000-0002-6872-4262]; Rabaza, O. [0000-0003-2766-2103]; Ramón Ballesta, A. [0000-0002-4323-0610]; Kim, M. [0000-0001-6218-2004]; Rodríguez Trinidad, A. [0000-0002-3356-8634]; Sadegi, S. [0000-0001-9897-6121]; Lampón, M. [0000-0002-0183-7158]; Nortmann, L. [0000-0001-8419-8760]; Sanz Forcada, J. [0000-0002-1600-7835]; Lodieu, N. [0000-0002-3612-8968]; Pedraz, S. [0000-0003-1346-208X]; Schäfer, S. [0000-0001-8597-8048]; Schlecker, M. [0000-0001-8355-2107]; Marfil, E. [0000-0001-8907-4775]; Redondo, P. G. [0000-0001-5992-5778]; Schöfer, P. [0000-0002-5969-3708]; Solano, E. [0000-0003-1885-5130]; Martín Ruiz, S. [0000-0002-9006-7182]; Sánchez Carrasco, M. A. [0000-0001-5533-3660]; Stuber, T. [0000-0003-2185-0525]; Suárez, J. C. [0000-0003-3649-8384]; Moya, A. [0000-0003-1665-5389]; Unidad de Excelencia Científica María de Maeztu Centro de Astrobiología del Instituto Nacional de Técnica Aeroespacial y CSIC, MDM-2017-0737; Centros de Excelencia Severo Ochoa, INSTITUTO DE ASTROFISICA DE ANDALUCIA (IAA), SEV-2017-0709
    Surveys have shown that super-Earth and Neptune-mass exoplanets are more frequent than gas giants around low-mass stars, as predicted by the core accretion theory of planet formation. We report the discovery of a giant planet around the very-low-mass star GJ 3512, as determined by optical and near-infrared radial-velocity observations. The planet has a minimum mass of 0.46 Jupiter masses, very high for such a small host star, and an eccentric 204-day orbit. Dynamical models show that the high eccentricity is most likely due to planet-planet interactions. We use simulations to demonstrate that the GJ 3512 planetary system challenges generally accepted formation theories, and that it puts constraints on the planet accretion and migration rates. Disk instabilities may be more efficient in forming planets than previously thought.Copyright © 2019 The Authors, some rights reserved; exclusive licensee American Association for the Advancement of Science
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    CARMENES input catalogue of M dwarfs: V. Luminosities, colours, and spectral energy distributions
    (EDP Sciences, 2020-10-12) Cifuentes, C.; Caballero, J. A.; Cortés Contreras, M.; Montes, D.; Abellán, F. J.; Dorda, R.; Holgado, G.; Zapatero Osorio, M. R.; Morales, J. C.; Amado, P. J.; Passegger, V. M.; Quirrenbach, A.; Reiners, A.; Ribas, I.; Sanz Forcada, J.; Schweitzer, A.; Seifert, W.; Solano, E.; Solano, Enrique; Agencia Estatal de Investigación (AEI); National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA); 0000-0003-1715-5087; 0000-0002-7349-1387; 0000-0003-3734-9866; 0000-0002-7779-238X; 0000-0001-5664-2852; Unidad de Excelencia Científica María de Maeztu Centro de Astrobiología del Instituto Nacional de Técnica Aeroespacial y CSIC, MDM-2017-0737
    Context. The relevance of M dwarfs in the search for potentially habitable Earth-sized planets has grown significantly in the last years. Aims. In our on-going effort to comprehensively and accurately characterise confirmed and potential planet-hosting M dwarfs, in particular for the CARMENES survey, we have carried out a comprehensive multi-band photometric analysis involving spectral energy distributions, luminosities, absolute magnitudes, colours, and spectral types, from which we have derived basic astrophysical parameters. Methods. We have carefully compiled photometry in 20 passbands from the ultraviolet to the mid-infrared, and combined it with the latest parallactic distances and close-multiplicity information, mostly from Gaia DR2, of a sample of 2479 K5 V to L8 stars and ultracool dwarfs, including 2210 nearby, bright M dwarfs. For this, we made extensive use of Virtual Observatory tools. Results. We have homogeneously computed accurate bolometric luminosities and effective temperatures of 1843 single stars, derived their radii and masses, studied the impact of metallicity, and compared our results with the literature. The over 40 000 individually inspected magnitudes, together with the basic data and derived parameters of the stars, individual and averaged by spectral type, have been made public to the astronomical community. In addition, we have reported 40 new close multiple systems and candidates (ρ < 3.3 arcsec) and 36 overluminous stars that are assigned to young Galactic populations. Conclusions. In the new era of exoplanet searches around M dwarfs via transit (e.g. TESS, PLATO) and radial velocity (e.g. CARMENES, NIRPS+HARPS), this work is of fundamental importance for stellar and therefore planetary parameter determination. © ESO 2020.
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    Lucky spectroscopy, an equivalent technique to lucky imaging II. Spatially resolved intermediate-resolution blue-violet spectroscopy of 19 close massive binaries using the William Herschel Telescope
    (EDP Sciences, 2021-06-29) Maíz Apellániz, J.; Barbá, R. H.; Fariña, C.; Sota, A.; Pantaleoni González, M.; Holgado, G.; Negueruela, I.; Simón Díaz, S.; European Commission (EC); Agencia Estatal de Investigación (AEI); Canary Islands Government; Agencia Canaria de Investigación, Innovación y Sociedad de la Información (ACIIS); Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (MINECO); Maíz Apellániz, J. [0000-0003-0825-3443]; Barbá, R. H. [0000-0003-1086-1579]; Fariña, C. [0000-0003-4940-3751]; Sota, A. [0000-0002-9404-6952]; Pantaleoni González, M. [0000-0001-9933-1229]; Holgado, G. [0000-0002-9296-8259]; Negueruela, I. [0000-0003-1952-3680]; Centro de Excelencia Científica Severo Ochoa Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía CSIC, SEV-2015-0548
    Context. Many massive stars have nearby companions. These hamper a characterization of massive stars through spectroscopy. Aims. We continue to obtain spatially resolved spectroscopy of close massive visual binaries to derive their spectral types. Methods. We used the lucky spectroscopy technique to obtain a large number of short long-slit spectroscopic exposures of 19 close visual binaries under good seeing conditions. We selected those with the best characteristics, extracted the spectra using multiple-profile fitting, and combined the results to derive spatially separated spectra. The results were analyzed in combination with data from lucky imaging, regular intermediate-resolution single-order spectroscopy, and échelle high-resolution spectroscopy. Results. The new application of lucky spectroscopy has allowed us (among other results) to [a] spatially disentangle two O stars (FN CMa B and 6 Cas B) with brighter BA supergiant companions for the first time; [b] determine that two B stars (α Sco B and HD 164 492 B) with close and more massive companions are fast rotators (in the second case, solving a case of mistaken identity); [c] extend the technique to cases with extreme magnitude differences (the previous two cases plus CS Cam A,B), shorter separations (HD 193 443 A,B), and fainter primary magnitudes down to B = 11 (HD 219 460 A,B); [d] spatially disentangle the spectra of stars with companions as diverse as an A supergiant (6 Cas A), a Wolf-Rayet star (HD 219 460 B = WR 157), and an M supergiant (α Sco A); [e] discover the unexpected identity of some targets such as two previously unknown bright O stars (HD 51 756 B and BD +60 544) and a new member of the rare OC category (HD 8768 A); and [f] identify and classify (in some cases for the first time) which of the components of four visual binaries (σ Ori, HD 219 460, HD 194 649, and HD 191 201) is a double-lined spectroscopic binary. For another seven systems (FN CMa, σ Sco, HD 51 756, HD 218 195, HD 17 520, HD 24 431, and HD 164 492), we detect signs of spectroscopic binarity using high-spectral-resolution spectroscopy. We also determine the limits of the technique.
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    The GALANTE photometric survey of the northern Galactic plane: project description and pipeline
    (Oxford Academics: Oxford University Press, 2021-07-02) Maíz Apellániz, J.; Alfaro, Emilio J.; Barbá, R. H.; Holgado, G.; Vázquez Ramió, H.; Varela, J.; Ederoclite, A.; Lorenzo Gutiérrez, A.; García Lario, P.; García Escudero, H.; García, M.; Coelho, P. R. T.; Centros de Excelencia Severo Ochoa, INSTITUTO DE ASTROFISICA DE ANDALUCIA (IAA), SEV-2017-0709; European Space Agency (ESA); Gobierno de Aragón; Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP); Agencia Estatal de Investigación (AEI); Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (MINECO); Coelho, P. R. T. [0000-0003-1846-4826]
    The GALANTE optical photometric survey is observing the northern Galactic plane and some adjacent regions using seven narrow- and intermediate-filters, covering a total of 1618 deg2. The survey has been designed with multiple exposure times and at least two different air masses per field to maximize its photometric dynamic range, comparable to that of Gaia, and ensure the accuracy of its photometric calibration. The goal is to reach at least 1 per cent accuracy and precision in the seven bands for all stars brighter than AB magnitude 17 while detecting fainter stars with lower values of the signal-to-noise ratio. The main purposes of GALANTE are the identification and study of extinguished O+B+WR stars, the derivation of their extinction characteristics, and the cataloguing of F and G stars in the solar neighbourhood. Its data will be also used for a variety of other stellar studies and to generate a high-resolution continuum-free map of the Hα emission in the Galactic plane. We describe the techniques and the pipeline that are being used to process the data, including the basis of an innovative calibration system based on Gaia DR2 and 2MASS photometry.
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    The IACOB project VI. On the elusive detection of massive O-type stars close to the ZAMS
    (EDP Sciences, 2020-06-30) Holgado, G.; Simón Díaz, S.; Haemmerlé, L.; Lennon, Daniel J.; Barbá, R. H.; Cerviño, M.; Castro, N.; Herrero, A.; Meynet, G.; Arias, J. I.; Agencia Estatal de Investigación (AEI); Agencia Canaria de Investigación, Innovación y Sociedad de la Información (ACIISI); Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF); European Research Council (ERC); Holgado, G. [0000-0002-9296-8259]; Unidad de Excelencia Científica María de Maeztu Centro de Astrobiología del Instituto Nacional de Técnica Aeroespacial y CSIC, MDM-2017-0737
    Context. The apparent lack of massive O-type stars near the zero-age main sequence, or ZAMS (at ages <2 Myr), is a topic that has been widely discussed in the past 40 yr. Different explanations for the elusive detection of these young massive stars have been proposed from the observational and theoretical side, but no firm conclusions have been reached yet. Aims. We reassess this empirical result here, benefiting from the high-quality spectroscopic observations of (more than 400) Galactic O-type stars gathered by the IACOB and OWN surveys. Methods. We used effective temperatures and surface gravities resulting from a homogeneous semi-automatized IACOB-GBAT/FASTWIND spectroscopic analysis to locate our sample of stars in the Kiel and spectroscopic Hertzsprung-Russell (sHR) diagrams. We evaluated the completeness of our magnitude-limited sample of stars as well as potential observational biases affecting the compiled sample using information from the Galactic O star catalog. We discuss limitations and possible systematics of our analysis method, and compare our results with other recent studies using smaller samples of Galactic O-type stars. We mainly base our discussion on the distribution of stars in the sHR diagram in order to avoid the use of still uncertain distances to most of the stars in our sample. However, we also performed a more detailed study of the young cluster Trumpler-14 as an illustrative example of how Gaia cluster distances can help to construct the associated classical HR diagram. Results. We find that the apparent lack of massive O-type stars near the ZAMS with initial evolutionary masses in the range between ≈30 and 70 M⊙ still persist even when spectroscopic results from a large non-biased sample of stars are used. We do not find any correlation between the dearth of stars close to the ZAMS and obvious observational biases, limitations of our analysis method, and/or the use of one example spectroscopic HR diagram instead of the classical HR diagram. Finally, by investigating the effect of the efficiency of mass accretion during the formation process of massive stars, we conclude that an adjustment of the mass accretion rate towards lower values than canonically assumed might reconcile the hotter boundary of the empirical distribution of optically detected O-type stars in the spectroscopic HR diagram and the theoretical birthline for stars with masses above ≈30 M⊙. Last, we also discuss how the presence of a small sample of O2-O3.5 stars found much closer to the ZAMS than the main distribution of Galactic O-type star might be explained in the context of this scenario when the effect of nonstandard star evolution (e.g. binary interaction, mergers, and/or homogeneous evolution) is taken into account.
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    Variability of OB stars from TESS southern Sectors 1–13 and high-resolution IACOB and OWN spectroscopy
    (EDP Sciences, 2020-07-13) Burssens, S.; Simón Díaz, S.; Bowman, D. M.; Holgado, G.; Michielsen, M.; De Burgos, A.; Castro, N.; Barbá, R. H.; Aerts, C.; Agencia Estatal de Investigación (AEI); European Research Council (ERC); National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA); Holgado, G. [0000-0002-9296-8259]; Bowman, D. [0000-0001-7402-3852]; Burssens, S. [0000-0002-1593-0863]; Aerts, C. [0000-0003-1822-7126]; Unidad de Excelencia Científica María de Maeztu Centro de Astrobiología del Instituto Nacional de Técnica Aeroespacial y CSIC, MDM-2017-0737
    Context. The lack of high-precision long-term continuous photometric data for large samples of stars has impeded the large-scale exploration of pulsational variability in the OB star regime. As a result, the candidates for in-depth asteroseismic modelling have remained limited to a few dozen dwarfs. The TESS nominal space mission has surveyed the southern sky, including parts of the galactic plane, yielding continuous data across at least 27 d for hundreds of OB stars. Aims. We aim to couple TESS data in the southern sky with ground-based spectroscopy to study the variability in two dimensions, mass and evolution. We focus mainly on the presence of coherent pulsation modes that may or may not be present in the predicted theoretical instability domains and unravel all frequency behaviour in the amplitude spectra of the TESS data. Methods. We compose a sample of 98 OB-type stars observed by TESS in Sectors 1–13 and with available multi-epoch, high-resolution spectroscopy gathered by the IACOB and OWN surveys. We present the short-cadence 2 min light curves of dozens of OB-type stars, which have one or more spectra in the IACOB or OWN database. Based on these light curves and their Lomb–Scargle periodograms, we performed variability classification and frequency analysis. We placed the stars in the spectroscopic Hertzsprung–Russell diagram to interpret the variability in an evolutionary context. Results. We deduce the diverse origins of the mmag-level variability found in all of the 98 OB stars in the TESS data. We find among the sample several new variable stars, including three hybrid pulsators, three eclipsing binaries, high frequency modes in a Be star, and potential heat-driven pulsations in two Oe stars. Conclusions. We identify stars for which future asteroseismic modelling is possible, provided mode identification is achieved. By comparing the position of the variables to theoretical instability strips, we discuss the current shortcomings in non-adiabatic pulsation theory and the distribution of pulsators in the upper Hertzsprung–Russell diagram.
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