Disks in Nearby Young Stellar Associations Found Via Virtual Reality
Susan Higashio, Marc J. Kuchner, Steven M. Silverberg, Matthew A., Brandt, Thomas G. Grubb, Jonathan Gagn\'e, John H. Debes, Joshua Schlieder,, John P. Wisniewski, Stewart Slocum, Alissa S. Bans, Shambo Bhattacharjee,, Joseph R. Biggs, Milton K.D. Bosch, Tadeas Cernohous

TL;DR
This study introduces a novel VR-based method to identify new members of nearby young stellar associations using Gaia data and infrared excesses, leading to the discovery of ten new association members.
Contribution
The paper presents a new VR visualization technique combined with Gaia data to find young stellar association members with infrared excesses, expanding current member catalogs.
Findings
Identified ten new members of young stellar associations.
Discovered an extreme debris disk with high infrared luminosity.
Reclassified some stars' association memberships based on VR analysis.
Abstract
The Disk Detective citizen science project recently released a new catalog of disk candidates found by visual inspection of images from NASA's Wide-Field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) mission and other surveys. We applied this new catalog of well-vetted disk candidates to search for new members of nearby young stellar associations (YSAs) using a novel technique based on Gaia data and virtual reality (VR). We examined AB Doradus, Argus, Pictoris, Carina, Columba, Octans-Near, Tucana-Horologium, and TW Hya by displaying them in VR together with other nearby stars, color-coded to show infrared excesses found via Disk Detective. Using this method allows us to find new association members in mass regimes where isochrones are degenerate. We propose ten new YSA members with infrared excesses: three of AB Doradus (HD 44775, HD 40540 and HD 44510), one of Pictoris (HD 198472),…
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