SSTYSV J032855.72+311442.1 , the SIMBAD biblio

2015AJ....150..175R - Astron. J., 150, 175 (2015/December-0)

YSOVAR: mid-infrared variability in NGC 1333.

REBULL L.M., STAUFFER J.R., CODY A.M., GUNTHER H.M., HILLENBRAND L.A., POPPENHAEGER K., WOLK S.J., HORA J., HERNANDEZ J., BAYO A., COVEY K., FORBRICH J., GUTERMUTH R., MORALES-CALDERON M., PLAVCHAN P., SONG I., BOUY H., TEREBEY S., CUILLANDRE J.C. and ALLEN L.E.

Abstract (from CDS):

As part of the Young Stellar Object VARiability (YSOVAR) program, we monitored NGC 1333 for ∼35 days at 3.6 and 4.5 µm using the Spitzer Space Telescope. We report here on the mid-infrared variability of the point sources in the ∼10'x∼20' area centered on 03:29:06, +31:19:30 (J2000). Out of 701 light curves in either channel, we find 78 variables over the YSOVAR campaign. About half of the members are variable. The variable fraction for the most embedded spectral energy distributions (SEDs) (Class I, flat) is higher than that for less embedded SEDs (Class II), which is in turn higher than the star-like SEDs (Class III). A few objects have amplitudes (10-90th percentile brightness) in [3.6] or [4.5] > 0.2 mag; a more typical amplitude is 0.1-0.15 mag. The largest color change is >0.2 mag. There are 24 periodic objects, with 40% of them being flat SED class. This may mean that the periodic signal is primarily from the disk, not the photosphere, in those cases. We find 9 variables likely to be ``dippers,'' where texture in the disk occults the central star, and 11 likely to be ``bursters,'' where accretion instabilities create brightness bursts. There are 39 objects that have significant trends in [3.6]-[4.5] color over the campaign, about evenly divided between redder-when-fainter (consistent with extinction variations) and bluer-when-fainter. About a third of the 17 Class 0 and/or jet-driving sources from the literature are variable over the YSOVAR campaign, and a larger fraction (∼half) are variable between the YSOVAR campaign and the cryogenic-era Spitzer observations (6-7 years), perhaps because it takes time for the envelope to respond to changes in the central source. The NGC 1333 brown dwarfs do not stand out from the stellar light curves in any way except there is a much larger fraction of periodic objects (∼60% of variable brown dwarfs are periodic, compared to ∼30% of the variables overall). And Software

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): circumstellar matter - stars: pre-main sequence - stars: protostars - stars: variables: general

VizieR on-line data: <Available at CDS (J/AJ/150/175): table1.dat table5.dat table6.dat table7.dat>

Nomenclature: Table 1: SSTYSV JHHMMSS.ss+DDMMSS.s N=701.

Status at CDS : All or part of tables of objects could be ingested in SIMBAD with priority 2.

CDS comments: Acronyms in Simbad: Getman NN = [GFT2002] NN ; Gutermuth NN = [GMM2008] NN ; IRAS NA = [JCC87] IRAS NA ; J07-NN = [JJK2007] NN ; LALNNN = [LAL96] NNN ; Preibisch NN = [P97] NN ; SKN = [SK2001] N ; S-N = [SGJ2009] N ; SSV NN & SVS NN = [SVS76] NGC 1333 NN ; VLA NN = [RAC97] VLA NN ; Winston NNN = [WMW2010] NNN.

Simbad objects: 72

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