Gaia 19ajj: A Young Star Brightening Due to Enhanced Accretion + Reduced Extinction
Lynne A. Hillenbrand, Bo Reipurth, Michael Connelley, Roc M. Cutri,, Howard Isaacson

TL;DR
Gaia 19ajj is a young star that experienced a significant brightening over three years due to cycles of increased disk accretion and decreased extinction, evidenced by its photometric and spectroscopic features.
Contribution
This study presents detailed photometric and spectroscopic analysis of Gaia 19ajj, revealing its behavior as a young star with recurrent bright phases driven by accretion and extinction changes.
Findings
Photometric brightening over 3 years in optical and infrared.
Spectroscopic features indicating active outflows and youth.
Similarity to known eruptive young stars like V2492 Cyg.
Abstract
We report on the source Gaia 19ajj, identifying it as a young star associated with a little-studied star-forming region seen along a complex line-of-sight through the Gum Nebula. The optical lightcurve recently recorded by Gaia exhibits a slow and unsteady 5.5 mag rise over about 3 years, while the mid-infrared lightcurve from NEOWISE over the same time period shows a 1.2 mag rise having similar structure. Available color information is inconsistent with pure extinction reduction as the cause for the photometric brightening. Optical spectroscopic characteristics in the current bright phase include: little in the way of absorption except for the hallmark Li I 6707 A signature of youth plus weak e.g. Ca I and notably Ba II; strong wind/outflow in Ca II, Mg I b, Na I D, Halpha, K I, O I; jet signatures in [O I], [S II], [Ca II], [Fe II], and [Ni II]; and narrow rest-velocity emission in…
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