Evidence for an FU Orionis-like Outburst from a Classical T Tauri Star
Adam A. Miller (1), Lynne A. Hillenbrand (2), Kevin R. Covey (3), Dovi, Poznanski (1,4), Jeffrey M. Silverman (1), Io K. W. Kleiser (1), Barbara, Rojas-Ayala (3), Philip S. Muirhead (3), S. Bradley Cenko (1), Joshua S., Bloom (1), Mansi M. Kasliwal (2), Alexei V. Filippenko (1)

TL;DR
This paper documents the first well-sampled optical to mid-infrared spectral evolution of a classical T Tauri star undergoing an FU Orionis-like outburst, confirming the link between such eruptions and disk instabilities.
Contribution
It provides detailed observational evidence of an FU Orionis-like outburst from a classical T Tauri star, including pre-outburst data, and supports the theory that these eruptions are caused by disk instabilities.
Findings
The star exhibited a brightness increase of over 4 magnitudes.
A reflection nebula appeared during the outburst.
Spectral features resembled those of G supergiants and late K--M giants, with outflow signatures.
Abstract
We present pre- and post-outburst observations of the new FU Orionis-like young stellar object PTF 10qpf (also known as LkHa 188-G4 and HBC 722). Prior to this outburst, LkHa 188-G4 was classified as a classical T Tauri star on the basis of its optical emission-line spectrum superposed on a K8-type photosphere, and its photometric variability. The mid-infrared spectral index of LkHa 188-G4 indicates a Class II-type object. LkHa 188-G4 exhibited a steady rise by ~1 mag over ~11 months starting in Aug. 2009, before a subsequent more abrupt rise of > 3 mag on a time scale of ~2 months. Observations taken during the eruption exhibit the defining characteristics of FU Orionis variables: (i) an increase in brightness by > 4 mag, (ii) a bright optical/near-infrared reflection nebula appeared, (iii) optical spectra are consistent with a G supergiant and dominated by absorption lines, the only…
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