Large Amplitude Photometric Variability of the Candidate Protoplanet TMR-1C
B. Riaz, E. L. Martin

TL;DR
This study reports significant near-infrared photometric variability of the candidate protoplanet TMR-1C over seven years, suggesting it is a young object with circumstellar material rather than a background star.
Contribution
The paper provides the first multi-epoch photometric analysis of TMR-1C, demonstrating large variability and supporting its classification as a young, protoplanetary candidate with circumstellar material.
Findings
TMR-1C shows 1-2 mag variability in H and Ks bands.
The object becomes redder as it dims, indicating possible circumstellar extinction.
Large amplitude variability supports its youth and protoplanetary nature.
Abstract
In their HST/NICMOS observations, Terebey et al. 1998 detected a candidate protoplanet, TMR-1C, that lies at a separation of about 10" (~1000 AU) from the Class I protobinary TMR-1 (IRAS 04361+2547). A narrow filament-like structure was observed extending south-east from the central proto-binary system towards TMR-1C, suggesting a morphology in which the candidate protoplanet may have been ejected from the TMR-1 system. Follow-up low-resolution spectroscopy could not confirm if this object is a protoplanet or a low-luminosity background star. We present two epochs of near-infrared photometric observations obtained at the CFHT of TMR-1C. The time span of ~7 years between the two sets of observations provides with an opportunity to, (a) check for any photometric variability similar to that observed among young stellar objects, which would indicate the youth of this source, and, (b)…
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