The ALMA early science view of FUor/EXor objects - V: continuum disc masses and sizes
Lucas A. Cieza, Dary Ruiz-Rodriguez, Sebastian Perez, Simon Casassus,, Jonathan P. Williams, Alice Zurlo, David A. Principe, Antonio Hales, Jose L., Prieto, John J. Tobin, Zhaohuan Zhu, Sebastian Marino

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations to compare disc masses and sizes of FUor and EXor outbursting young stars, revealing significant differences that suggest distinct evolutionary stages.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed continuum disc mass and size measurements for a small sample of FUor and EXor objects, highlighting key differences between these classes.
Findings
FUor discs are significantly more massive than EXor discs.
FUor objects exhibit prominent molecular outflows, unlike EXor objects.
FUor discs tend to be more compact and have smaller characteristic radii.
Abstract
Low-mass stars build a significant fraction of their total mass during short outbursts of enhanced accretion known as FUor and EXor outbursts. FUor objects are characterized by a sudden brightening of ~5 magnitudes at visible wavelengths within one year and remain bright for decades. EXor objects have lower amplitude outbursts on shorter timescales. Here we discuss a 1.3 mm ALMA mini-survey of eight outbursting sources (three FUor, four EXor, and the borderline object V1647 Ori) in the Orion Molecular Cloud. While previous papers in this series discuss the remarkable molecular outflows observed in the three FUor objects and V1647 Ori, here we focus on the continuum data and the differences and similarities between the FUor and EXor populations. We find that FUor discs are significantly more massive (~80-600 M_JUP) than the EXor objects (~0.5-40 M_JUP ). We also report that the EXor…
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