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Variable red- and blue-shifted absorption features observed in the Ca ii K line towards the A-type shell star $phi$ Leo have been suggested by us in a previous work to be likely due to solid, comet-like bodies in the circumstellar (CS) environment. Our aim is to expand our observational study of this object to other characteristic spectral lines of A-type photospheres as well as to lines arising in their CS shells. We have obtained more than 500 high-resolution optical spectra collected at different telescopes from December 2015 to January 2019. We have analysed some photospheric lines, in particular Ca i 4226 AA ~and Mg ii 4481 AA, as well as the circumstellar shell lines Ca ii H&K, Ca ii IR triplet, Fe ii, Ti ii, and the Balmer lines H$alpha$ and H$beta$. Our observational study reveals that $phi$ Leo is a variable $delta$ Scuti star whose spectra show remarkable dumps and bumps superimposed on the photospheric line profiles, which vary their strength and sharpness, propagate from blue- to more red-shifted radial velocities and persisting during a few hours, likely produced by non-radial pulsations. At the same time, all shell lines present an emission at $sim$3 km/s centered at the core of the CS features, and two variable absorption minima at both sides of the emission. The variations observed in the Ca ii H&K, Fe ii and Ti ii lines occur at any time scale from minutes to days and observing run, but without any clear correlation or recognizable temporal pattern among the different lines. In the case of H$alpha$ the CS contribution is also variable in just one of the observing runs. We suggest that $phi$ Leo is a rapidly rotating $delta$ Scuti star surrounded by a variable, (nearly) edge-on CS disk possibly re-supplied by the $delta$ Scuti pulsations.
We present an intensive monitoring of high-resolution spectra of the Ca {sc ii} K line in the A7IV shell star $Phi$ Leo at very short (minutes, hours), short (night to night), and medium (weeks, months) timescales. The spectra show remarkable variabl
A global disk oscillation implemented in the viscous decretion disk (VDD) model has been used to reproduce most of the observed properties of the well known Be star $zeta$ Tau. 48 Librae shares several similarities with $zeta$ Tau -- they are both ea
We present new interferometer molecular observations of R Leo taken at 1.2 mm with the Atacama Large Millimeter Array with an angular resolution up to ~0.026 arcsec. These observations permit us to resolve the innermost envelope of this star revealin
Photoevaporation by stellar ionizing radiation is believed to play an important role in the dispersal of disks around young stars. The mass loss model for dust-free disks developed by Hollenbach et al. is currently regarded as a conventional one and
We report the results of spectrophotometric observations of the massive star MN18 revealed via discovery of a bipolar nebula around it with the Spitzer Space Telescope. Using the optical spectrum obtained with the Southern African Large Telescope, we