Near-IR Variability in Young Stars in Cygnus OB7
Thomas S. Rice (1), Scott J. Wolk (1), Colin Aspin (2) ((1), Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Cambridge, MA (2) Institute for, Astronomy, University of Hawai'i, Hilo, HI)

TL;DR
This study presents a detailed near-infrared monitoring of young stars in Cygnus OB7, revealing significant variability in disk-related emissions and suggesting dynamic processes in protoplanetary disks over 1.5 years.
Contribution
First long-term near-infrared variability study of young stars in Cygnus OB7, identifying transient excesses and complex disk activity.
Findings
93% of YSOs are variable in NIR
Approximately half of the YSOs show variability consistent with disk and extinction changes
Some stars exhibit variability exceeding one magnitude
Abstract
We present the first results from a 124 night J, H, K near-infrared monitoring campaign of the dark cloud L 1003 in Cygnus OB7, an active star-forming region. Using 3 seasons of UKIRT observations spanning 1.5 years, we obtained high-quality photometry on 9,200 stars down to J=17 mag, with photometric uncertainty better than 0.04 mag. On the basis of near-infrared excesses from disks, we identify 30 pre-main sequence stars, including 24 which are newly discovered. We analyze those stars and find the NIR excesses are significantly variable. All 9,200 stars were monitored for photometric variability; among the field star population, about 160 exhibited near-infrared variability (1.7% of the sample). Of the 30 YSOs (young stellar objects), 28 of them (93%) are variable at a significant level. 25 of the 30 YSOs have near-infrared excess consistent with simple disk-plus-star classical T…
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