YSOVAR: Mid-Infrared Variability in NGC 1333
L. M. Rebull, J. R. Stauffer, A. M. Cody, H. M. Guenther, L. A., Hillenbrand, K. Poppenhaeger, S. J. Wolk, J. Hora, J. Hernandez, A. Bayo, K., Covey, J. Forbrich, R. Gutermuth, M. Morales-Calderon, P. Plavchan, I. Song,, H. Bouy, S. Terebey, J. C. Cuillandre, L. Allen

TL;DR
This study used the Spitzer Space Telescope to monitor NGC 1333 over 35 days, revealing diverse mid-infrared variability patterns among young stellar objects, with implications for disk and accretion processes.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed characterization of mid-infrared variability in NGC 1333, highlighting differences across evolutionary classes and identifying specific variability types like dippers and bursters.
Findings
78 variables identified out of 701 sources
Higher variability fraction in embedded Class I and flat SED objects
Detection of periodic, dipper, and burster variability types
Abstract
As part of the Young Stellar Object VARiability (YSOVAR) program, we monitored NGC 1333 for ~35 days at 3.6 and 4.5 um using the Spitzer Space Telescope. We report here on the mid-infrared variability of the point sources in the ~10x~20arcmin area centered on 03:29:06, +31:19:30 (J2000). Out of 701 light curves in either channel, we find 78 variables over the YSOVAR campaign. About half of the members are variable. The variable fraction for the most embedded SEDs (Class I, flat) is higher than that for less embedded SEDs (Class II), which is in turn higher than the star-like SEDs (Class III). A few objects have amplitudes (10-90th percentile brightness) in [3.6] or [4.5]>0.2 mag; a more typical amplitude is 0.1-0.15 mag. The largest color change is >0.2 mag. There are 24 periodic objects, with 40% of them being flat SED class. This may mean that the periodic signal is primarily from the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
