Investigating episodic accretion in a very low-mass young stellar object
Camille Stock, Alessio Caratti o Garatti, Pauline McGinnis, Rebeca, Garcia Lopez, Simone Antoniucci, Ruben Fedriani, and Tom P. Ray

TL;DR
This study investigates accretion variability in a very low-mass Class I protostar, revealing a significant accretion burst and dust lifting event, suggesting such phenomena occur even in the lowest mass young stellar objects.
Contribution
First detailed analysis of episodic accretion in a very low-mass Class I protostar, demonstrating that low-mass objects can experience strong accretion bursts similar to higher-mass YSOs.
Findings
Detected a >1 magnitude increase in K-band luminosity.
Observed an order of magnitude rise in accretion rate.
Identified an accretion burst in a very low-mass protostar.
Abstract
Very low-mass Class I protostars have been investigated very little thus far. Variability of these young stellar objects (YSOs) and whether or not they are capable of strong episodic accretion is also left relatively unstudied. We investigate accretion variability in IRS54, a Class I very low-mass protostar with a mass of M ~ 0.1 - 0.2 M. We obtained spectroscopic and photometric data with VLT/ISAAC and VLT/SINFONI in the near-infrared (, , and bands) across four epochs (2005, 2010, 2013, and 2014). We used accretion-tracing lines (Pa and Br) and outflow-tracing lines (H and [FeII] to examine physical properties and kinematics of the object. A large increase in luminosity was found between the 2005 and 2013 epochs of more than 1 magnitude in the band, followed in 2014 by a steep decrease. Consistently, the mass accretion rate…
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