The JCMT Transient Survey: Four Year Summary of Monitoring the Submillimeter Variability of Protostars
Yong-Hee Lee, Doug Johnstone, Jeong-Eun Lee, Gregory Herczeg, Steve, Mairs, Carlos Contreras-Pe\~na, Jennifer Hatchell, Tim Naylor, Graham S., Bell, Tyler L. Bourke, Colton Broughton, Logan Francis, Aashish Gupta, Daniel, Harsono, Sheng-Yuan Liu, Geumsook Park, Spencer Plovie

TL;DR
This four-year JCMT survey monitored submillimeter variability in nearby star-forming regions, revealing that about 7% of protostars exhibit significant accretion variability, with implications for episodic accretion's role in star formation.
Contribution
First systematic four-year submillimeter monitoring of protostars, identifying secular variability and estimating the prevalence of episodic accretion events.
Findings
18 secular variables identified, all protostars.
No stochastic or single-epoch burst events observed.
Approximately 7% of protostars predicted to have significant accretion events.
Abstract
We present the four-year survey results of monthly submillimeter monitoring of eight nearby (pc) star-forming regions by the JCMT Transient Survey. We apply the Lomb-Scargle Periodogram technique to search for and characterize variability on 295 submillimeter peaks brighter than 0.14 Jy beam, including 22 disk sources (Class II), 83 protostars (Class 0/I), and 190 starless sources. We uncover 18 secular variables, all of them protostars. No single-epoch burst or drop events and no inherently stochastic sources are observed. We classify the secular variables by their timescales into three groups: Periodic, Curved, and Linear. For the Curved and Periodic cases, the detectable fractional amplitude, with respect to mean peak brightness, is % for sources brighter than 0.5 Jy beam. Limiting our sample to only these bright sources, the observed variable…
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