The outburst of the eruptive young star OO Serpentis between 1995 and 2006
\'A. K\'osp\'al, P. \'Abrah\'am, T. Prusti, J. Acosta-Pulido, S. Hony,, A. Mo\'or, R. Siebenmorgen

TL;DR
This study documents the infrared outburst and subsequent fading of the young star OO Serpentis from 1995 to 2006, revealing its unique outburst characteristics and evolutionary status compared to similar objects.
Contribution
First infrared monitoring of OO Ser's outburst and fading, providing detailed light curves and spectral energy distributions that clarify its classification and physical properties.
Findings
Outburst caused wavelength-independent brightening and fading.
Fading rate suggests OO Ser will not return to quiescence before 2011.
Outburst timescale is intermediate between FUors and EXors.
Abstract
OO Serpentis is a deeply embedded pre-main sequence star that went into outburst in 1995 and gradually faded afterwards. Its eruption resembled the well-known FU Orionis-type or EX Lupi-type outbursts. Since very few such events have ever been documented at infrared wavelengths, our aim is to study the temporal evolution of OO Ser in the infrared. OO Ser was monitored with the Infrared Space Observatory starting 4 months after peak brightness and covering 20 months. In 2004-2006 we again observed OO Ser from the ground and complemented this dataset with archival Spitzer obsevations also from 2004. We analysed these data with special attention to source confusion and constructed light curves at 10 different wavelengths as well as spectral energy distributions. The outburst caused brightening in the whole infrared regime. According to the infrared light curves, OO Ser started a…
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