On The Unusual Variability of 2MASS J06195260-2903592: A Long-Lived Disk around a Young Ultracool Dwarf
Michael C. Liu, Eugene A. Magnier, Eric Gaidos, Trent J. Dupuy, Pengyu, Liu, Beth A. Biller, Johanna M. Vos, Katelyn N. Allers, Jason T. Hinkle,, Benjamin J. Shappee, Sage N. L. Constantinou, Mitchell T. Dennis, Kenji S., Emerson

TL;DR
This study characterizes the variable IR and optical properties of the young ultracool dwarf 2MASS J0619-2903, revealing a long-lived circumstellar disk with significant extinction variability over years to hours.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed multi-epoch analysis of variability in a young ultracool dwarf with a persistent disk, suggesting the presence of an unusually long-lived primordial disk.
Findings
Large-amplitude variability in IR and optical over days to years.
Extinction changes of about 2 magnitudes inferred from spectral and photometric data.
Presence of a long-lived circumstellar disk around a young ultracool dwarf.
Abstract
We present the characterization of the low-gravity M6 dwarf 2MASS J0619-2903 previously identified as an unusual field object based on its strong IR excess and variable near-IR spectrum. Multiple epochs of low-resolution (R~150) near-IR spectra show large-amplitude (~0.1-0.5 mag) continuum variations on timescales of days to 12 years, unlike the small-amplitude variability typical for field ultracool dwarfs. The variations between epochs are well-modeled as changes in the relative extinction ( mag). Likewise, Pan-STARRS optical photometry varies on timescales as long as 11 years (and possibly as short as an hour) and implies similar amplitude changes. NEOWISE mid-IR light curves also suggest changes on 6-month timescales, with amplitudes consistent with the optical/near-IR extinction variations. However, near-IR spectra, near-IR photometry, and optical…
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