Evolution of dust and ice features around FU Orionis objects
S. P. Quanz, Th. Henning, J. Bouwman, R. van Boekel, A. Juhasz, H., Linz (all Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, Heidelberg/Germany), K.M., Pontoppidan (California Institute of Technology, Pasadena/USA), F. Lahuis, (Leiden Observatory

TL;DR
This study analyzes the dust and ice features around FU Orionis objects using infrared spectroscopy, revealing two categories based on silicate features and providing insights into their evolutionary stages and disk properties.
Contribution
It introduces a classification of FUors based on silicate features and links these to their evolutionary status and disk characteristics.
Findings
Objects with silicate absorption are embedded in dusty envelopes.
Silicate emission arises from surface layers of accretion disks.
Significant grain growth occurs in disks, with little evidence of crystallization.
Abstract
(abridged) We present spectroscopy data for a sample of 14 FUors and 2 TTauri stars observed with the Spitzer Space Telescope or with the Infrared Space Observatory (ISO). Based on the appearance of the 10 micron silicate feature we define 2 categories of FUors. Objects showing the silicate feature in absorption (Category 1) are still embedded in a dusty and icy envelope. The shape of the 10 micron silicate absorption bands is compared to typical dust compositions of the interstellar medium and found to be in general agreement. Only one object (RNO 1B) appears to be too rich in amorphous pyroxene dust, but a superposed emission feature can explain the observed shape. We derive optical depths and extinction values from the silicate band and additional ice bands at 6.0, 6.8 and 15.2 micron. In particular the analysis of the CO_2 ice band at 15.2 micron allows us to search for evidence for…
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