Near-infrared Variability among YSOs in the Star Formation Region Cygnus OB7
Scott J. Wolk (1), Thomas S. Rice (1), Colin A. Aspin (2) ((1), Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics), ((2) Institute for, Astronomy, University of Hawaii)

TL;DR
This study analyzes near-infrared variability of young stellar objects in Cygnus OB7, revealing diverse variability patterns, disk-related causes, and a very young cluster age, with the discovery of an eclipsing binary.
Contribution
It provides detailed classification of YSO variability types and links variability behaviors to disk dynamics, offering new insights into early stellar evolution.
Findings
All YSOs are variable over a few years.
Identified four classes of variability behavior.
Discovered a 17.87-day eclipsing binary.
Abstract
We present an analysis of near-infrared time-series photometry in J, H, and K bands for about 100 epochs of a 1 square degree region of the Lynds 1003/1004 dark cloud in the Cygnus OB7 region. Augmented by data from the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE), we identify 96 candidate disk bearing young stellar objects (YSOs) in the region. Of these, 30 are clearly Class I or earlier. Using the Wide-Field imaging CAMera (WFCAM) on the United Kingdom InfraRed Telescope (UKIRT), we were able to obtain photometry over three observing seasons, with photometric uncertainty better than 0.05 mag down to J ~17. We study detailed light curves and color trajectories of ~50 of the YSOs in the monitored field. We investigate the variability and periodicity of the YSOs and find the data are consistent with all YSOs being variable in these wavelengths on time scales of a few years. We divide the…
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