Outbursts and Disk Variability in Be Stars
Jonathan Labadie-Bartz, S. Drew Chojnowski, David G. Whelan, Joshua, Pepper, M. Virginia McSwain, Marcelo Borges Fernandes, John P. Wisniewski,, Guy S. Stringfellow, Alex C. Carciofi, Robert J. Siverd, Amy L. Glazier,, Sophie G. Anderson, Anthoni J. Caravello, Keivan G. Stassun

TL;DR
This study analyzes optical and infrared data of 160 Be stars to understand their disk variability, outbursts, and growth/dissipation processes, revealing that disk events are common, often asymmetrical, and vary with stellar type.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis linking photometric and spectroscopic changes during disk outbursts in a large sample of Be stars.
Findings
28% of stars show disk-building outbursts.
Outbursts last from 2 to 1000 days, with amplitudes up to 0.5 mag.
Disk dissipation generally takes twice as long as buildup.
Abstract
In order to study the growth and evolution of circumstellar disks around classical Be stars, we analyze optical time-series photometry from the KELT survey with simultaneous infrared and visible spectroscopy from the APOGEE survey and BeSS database for a sample of 160 Galactic classical Be stars. The systems studied here show variability including transitions from a diskless to a disk-possessing state (and vice versa), and persistent disks that vary in strength, being replenished at either regularly or irregularly occurring intervals. We detect disk-building events (outbursts) in the light curves of 28\% of our sample. Outbursts are more commonly observed in early- (57\%), compared to mid- (27\%) and late-type (8\%) systems. A given system may show anywhere between 0 -- 40 individual outbursts in its light curve, with amplitudes ranging up to 0.5 mag and event durations between…
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