LAMP: The Long-term Accretion Monitoring Program of T Tauri stars in Chamaeleon-I
G. Costigan (1,2,3), A. Scholz (1), B. Stelzer (4), T. Ray (1), J. S., Vink (2), S. Mohanty (5) ((1) School of Cosmic Physics, Dublin Institute for, Advanced Studies, Ireland (2) Armagh Observatory, Armagh, Northern Ireland, (3) European Southern Observatory, Garching, Germany

TL;DR
This study monitors accretion variability in young stars in Chamaeleon I over 15 months, revealing that accretion rates are relatively stable and variability occurs mainly on short, weekly timescales, with implications for understanding star formation.
Contribution
It provides a long-term variability analysis of accretion in T Tauri stars, highlighting the reliability of certain accretion diagnostics and the stability of accretion rates over time.
Findings
Accretion rates vary by up to ~1.11 dex over 15 months.
Ha 10% width is unreliable for accretion rate estimation.
Most variability occurs on timescales of less than 25 days.
Abstract
We present the results of a variability study of accreting young stellar objects in the Chameleon I star-forming region which is based on ~300 high resolution optical spectra from the multi-object fibre spectrograph FLAMES/GIRAFFE at the ESO/VLT. Twenty five objects with spectral types from G2-M5.75 were observed 12 times over the course of 15 months. Using the emission lines Ha (6562.81 A) and Ca II (8662.1 A) as accretion indicators we found 10 accreting and 15 non-accreting objects. We derived accretion rates for all accretors in the sample using the Ha equivalent width, Ha 10% width and the CaII equivalent width. The mean amplitude of variations in derived accretion rate from Ha equivalent width was ~ 0.37 dex, from Ca II equivalent width ~0.83 dex and from Ha 10% width ~1.11 dex. Based on the large amplitude of variations in accretion rates derived from the Ha 10% width with…
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