UV variability and accretion dynamics in the young open cluster NGC 2264
Laura Venuti, Jerome Bouvier, Jonathan Irwin, John Stauffer, Lynne, Hillenbrand, Luisa Rebull, Ann Marie Cody, Silvia Alencar, Giuseppina Micela,, Ettore Flaccomio, Giovanni Peres

TL;DR
This study investigates UV and optical variability in young stars of NGC 2264, revealing distinct behaviors linked to accretion activity, and identifies the dominant physical mechanisms driving variability over different timescales.
Contribution
It provides the first simultaneous u- and r-band monitoring of a large sample of young stars, distinguishing variability sources between accreting and non-accreting members.
Findings
Accreting stars show higher UV variability than non-accretors.
Variability correlates with UV excess, indicating accretion and star-disk interaction as main causes.
Rotational modulation by spots dominates variability over timescales up to several years.
Abstract
We explore UV and optical variability signatures for several hundred members of NGC 2264 (3 Myr). We performed simultaneous u- and r-band monitoring over two full weeks with CFHT/MegaCam. About 750 young stars are probed; 40% of them are accreting. Statistically distinct variability properties are observed for accreting and non-accreting cluster members. The accretors exhibit a significantly higher level of variability than the non-accretors, especially in the UV. The amount of u-band variability correlates statistically with UV excess in disk-bearing objects, which suggests that accretion and star-disk interaction are the main sources of variability. Cool magnetic spots, several hundred degrees colder than the photosphere and covering from 5 to 30% of the stellar surface, appear to be the leading factor of variability for the non-accreting stars. In contrast, accretion spots, a few…
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