Interferometric study on the temporal variability of the brightness distributions of protoplanetary disks
J. Kobus, S. Wolf, T. Ratzka, R. Brunngr\"aber

TL;DR
This study analyzes multi-epoch interferometric observations of protoplanetary disks to detect and quantify temporal brightness distribution variations, revealing significant variability in several young stellar objects and providing insights into planet formation regions.
Contribution
It introduces methods to detect brightness variability in protoplanetary disks using VLTI multi-epoch data, highlighting observed variations in specific objects and advancing understanding of disk dynamics.
Findings
Detected significant brightness variability in six objects.
Identified evidence of variability in one additional object.
Observed asymmetric structure changes in several disks.
Abstract
Multi-epoch observations have revealed the variability of pre-main sequence stars and/or their environment. Moreover, structures in orbital motion around the central star, resulting from planet-disk interaction, are predicted to cause temporal variations in the brightness distributions of protoplanetary disks. Through repeated observations with the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI) over nearly two decades, the ESO Archive has become a treasure chest containing high-resolution multi-epoch near- and mid-infrared observations of the potential planet-forming regions in protoplanetary disks. We aim to investigate whether the existing multi-epoch observations provide evidence for the variability of the brightness distributions of the innermost few astronomical units of protoplanetary disks and to quantify any variations detected. We present different approaches to search for evidence…
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