Episodic eruptions of young accreting stars: the key role of disc thermal instability due to Hydrogen ionisation
Sergei Nayakshin, Fernando Cruz Saenz de Miera, Agnes Kospal,, Aleksandra Calovic, Jochen Eisloffel, and Douglas N.C. Lin

TL;DR
This paper investigates how disc thermal instability due to hydrogen ionisation can explain various episodic accretion events in young stars, highlighting its role in intermediate bursters and class differentiation, while acknowledging its limitations.
Contribution
It demonstrates that hydrogen ionisation thermal instability can explain intermediate burst types and predicts a burst rate desert, but additional physics are needed for full explanation.
Findings
Intermediate bursters fit the TI scenario with realistic viscosity.
A predicted burst rate desert matches observations.
TI influences class differentiation of FUORs and EXORs.
Abstract
In the classical grouping of large magnitude episodic variability of young accreting stars, FUORs outshine their stars by a factor of 100, and can last for up to centuries; EXORs are dimmer, and last months to a year. A disc Hydrogen ionisation Thermal Instability (TI) scenario was previously proposed for FUORs but required unrealistically low disc viscosity. In the last decade, many intermediate type objects, e.g., FUOR-like in luminosity and spectra but EXOR-like in duration were found. Here we show that the intermediate type bursters Gaia20eae, PTF14jg, Gaia19bey and Gaia21bty may be naturally explained by the TI scenario with realistic viscosity values. We argue that TI predicts a dearth (desert) of bursts with peak accretion rates between /yr and /yr, and that this desert is seen in the sample of all the bursters with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Atomic and Molecular Physics · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
