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In this study, we analyze the emission lines of different species present in 118 Galactic field classical Be stars in the wavelength range of 3800 - 9000 AA. We re-estimated the extinction parameter (A$_V$) for our sample stars using the newly available data from Gaia DR2 and suggest that it is important to consider A$_V$ while measuring the Balmer decrement (i.e. $D_{34}$ and $D_{54}$) values in classical Be stars. Subsequently, we estimated the Balmer decrement values for 105 program stars and found that $approx$ 20% of them show $D_{34}$ $geq$ 2.7, implying that their circumstellar disc are generally optically thick in nature. One program star, HD 60855 shows H$alpha$ in absorption -- indicative of discless phase. From our analysis, we found that in classical Be stars, H$alpha$ emission equivalent width values are mostly lower than 40 AA, which agrees with that present in literature. Moreover, we noticed that a threshold value of $sim$ 10 AA~of H$alpha$ emission equivalent width is necessary for Fe{sc ii} emission to become visible. We also observed that emission line equivalent widths of H$alpha$, P14, Fe{sc ii} 5169 and O{sc i} 8446 AA~for our program stars tend to be more intense in earlier spectral types, peaking mostly near B1-B2. Furthermore, we explored various formation regions of Ca{sc ii} emission lines around the circumstellar disc of classical Be stars. We suggest the possibility that Ca{sc ii} triplet emission can originate either in the circumbinary disc or from the cooler outer regions of the disc, which might not be isothermal in nature.
We present a spectroscopic study of 150 Classical Be stars in 39 open clusters using medium resolution spectra in the wavelength range 3800 - 9000 AA. One-third of the sample (48 stars in 18 clusters) has been studied for the first time. All these ca
We present FEROS high-resolution (R~45000) optical spectroscopy of 34 Herbig Ae/Be star candidates with previously unknown or poorly constrained spectral types. Within the sample, 16 sources are positionally coincident with nearby (d<250 pc) star-for
Rapid rotation is a fundamental characteristic of classical Be stars and a crucial property allowing for the formation of their circumstellar disks. Past evolution in a mass and angular momentum transferring binary system offers a plausible solution
We present the results of a multiplicity survey for a magnitude-limited sample of 31 classical Be stars conducted with the Navy Precision Optical Interferometer and the Mark III Stellar Interferometer. The interferometric observations were used to de
We report optical spectroscopic observations of the Be/gamma-ray binaries LSI+61303, MWC 148 and MWC 656. The peak separation and equivalent widths of prominent emission lines (H-alpha, H-beta, H-gamma, HeI, and FeII) are measured. We estimated the c