Discovery of a mid-infrared protostellar outburst of exceptional amplitude
P. W. Lucas, J. Elias, S. Points, Z. Guo, L.C. Smith, B. Stecklum, E., Vorobyov, C. Morris, J. Borissova, R. Kurtev, C. Contreras Pena, N. Medina,, D. Minniti, V.D. Ivanov, R.K. Saito

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of an exceptional mid-infrared outburst in a young stellar object, revealing insights into protostellar accretion events and their characteristics over a decade.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed observation of a long-duration, high-amplitude mid-infrared outburst in a YSO, expanding understanding of protostellar variability and accretion processes.
Findings
Outburst lasted over 13 years with a peak around 2010.
Luminosity during outburst was a few hundred solar luminosities.
The outburst resembles a classical FU Orionis event.
Abstract
We report the discovery of a mid-infrared outburst in a Young Stellar Object (YSO) with an amplitude close to 8 mag at 4.6 m. WISEA J142238.82-611553.7 is one of 23 highly variable WISE sources discovered in a search of Infrared Dark Clouds (IRDCs). It lies within the small IRDC G313.671-0.309 (d2.6 kpc), seen by the Herschel/HiGal survey as a compact, massive cloud core that may have been measurably warmed by the event. Pre-outburst data from Spitzer in 2004 suggest that it is a class I YSO, a view supported by observation of weak 2.12 m H emission in an otherwise featureless red continuum spectrum taken in 2019 (6 mag below the peak in K). Spitzer, WISE and VVV data indicate that the outburst began by 2006 and has a duration 13 yr, with a fairly flat peak from 2010--2014. The outburst luminosity of a few Lsun is consistent…
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