Potential Drivers of Mid-Infrared Variability in Young Stars: testing physical models with multi-epoch near-infrared spectra of YSOs in {\rho} Oph
Christopher M. Faesi, Kevin R. Covey, Robert Gutermuth, Maria, Morales-Calder\'on, John Stauffer, Peter Plavchan, Luisa Rebull, Inseok Song,, James P. Lloyd

TL;DR
This study investigates mid-infrared variability in young stellar objects by combining multi-epoch near-infrared spectra and mid-IR light curves, aiming to identify physical mechanisms behind observed brightness changes.
Contribution
It provides the first multi-epoch near-infrared spectral analysis of YSOs in ρ Oph, linking spectral features with mid-IR variability and accretion activity.
Findings
Mid-IR light curves show modest but significant variability.
Mass accretion rates vary over days to weeks.
No correlation found between mid-IR variability and accretion or veiling.
Abstract
Recent studies have identified several young stellar objects (YSOs) which exhibit significant mid-infrared (mid-IR) variability. A wide range of physical mechanisms may be responsible for these variations, including changes in a YSO's accretion rate or in the extinction or emission from the inner disk. We have obtained and analyzed multi-epoch near-infrared (NIR) spectra for five actively accreting YSOs in the Oph star-forming region along with contemporaneous mid-IR light curves obtained as part of the YSOVAR Spitzer/IRAC survey. Four of the five YSOs exhibit mid-IR light curves with modest (--0.4 mag) but statistically significant variations over our 40-day observation window. Measuring the strengths of prominent photospheric absorption lines and accretion sensitive \ion{H}{1} and \ion{He}{1} lines in each NIR spectrum, we derive estimates of each YSO's spectral type,…
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