The Extraordinary Outburst in the Massive Protostellar System NGC6334I-MM1: Strong Increase in Mid-Infrared Continuum Emission
T. R. Hunter, C. L. Brogan, J. M. De Buizer, A. P. M. Towner, C. D., Dowell, G. C. MacLeod, B. Stecklum, C. J. Cyganowski, S. J. El-Abd, B. A., McGuire

TL;DR
This paper reports the first mid-infrared imaging of the massive protostellar system NGC6334I-MM1 during an ongoing outburst, revealing a significant increase in luminosity and providing insights into the outburst's scale, duration, and accretion processes.
Contribution
It presents the first mid-infrared images of NGC6334I-MM1 during an outburst and models the luminosity increase, offering new understanding of massive protostellar outburst characteristics.
Findings
MM1's luminosity increased by a factor of 16.3 during the outburst.
The outburst energy and duration exceed previous similar events, indicating a higher accretion rate.
The event suggests a long-duration, moderate accretion outburst in a massive protostar.
Abstract
In recent years, dramatic outbursts have been identified toward massive protostars via infrared and millimeter dust continuum and molecular maser emission. The longest lived outburst ( yr) persists in NGC6334I-MM1, a deeply-embedded object with no near-IR counterpart. Using FORCAST and HAWC+ on SOFIA, we have obtained the first mid-infrared images of this field since the outburst began. Despite being undetected in pre-outburst ground-based 18 m images, MM1 is now the brightest region at all three wavelengths (25, 37, and 53 m), exceeding the ultracompact HII region MM3 (NGC6334F). Combining the SOFIA data with ALMA imaging at four wavelengths, we construct a spectral energy distribution of the combination of MM1 and the nearby hot core MM2. The best-fit Robitaille radiative transfer model yields a luminosity of . Accounting for an estimated…
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