A population of eruptive variable protostars in VVV
C. Contreras Pe\~na, P. W. Lucas, D. Minniti, R. Kurtev, W. Stimson,, C. Navarro Molina, J. Borissova, N. Kumar, M.A. Thompson, T.Gledhill, R., Terzi, D. Froebrich, A. Caratti o Garatti

TL;DR
This study discovers 816 high-amplitude infrared variable stars in the Galactic midplane, revealing that young stellar objects (YSOs) are the most common high-amplitude variables, with eruptive YSOs being more prevalent than previously known.
Contribution
It presents a large sample of eruptive variable YSOs, significantly increasing known cases and providing insights into their properties and evolutionary stages compared to prior research.
Findings
50% of variables are YSOs
Eruptive YSOs are more common in earlier stages
Outburst durations are 1-4 years, typical of EXors and FUors
Abstract
We present the discovery of 816 high amplitude infrared variable stars ( 1 mag) in 119 deg of the Galactic midplane covered by the Vista Variables in the Via Lactea (VVV) survey. Almost all are new discoveries and about 50 are YSOs. This provides further evidence that YSOs are the commonest high amplitude infrared variable stars in the Galactic plane. In the 2010-2014 time series of likely YSOs we find that the amplitude of variability increases towards younger evolutionary classes (class I and flat-spectrum sources) except on short timescales (25 days) where this trend is reversed. Dividing the likely YSOs by light curve morphology, we find 106 with eruptive light curves, 45 dippers, 39 faders, 24 eclipsing binaries, 65 long-term periodic variables (P100 days) and 162 short-term variables. Eruptive YSOs and faders tend to have the highest amplitudes…
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