The accretion burst of the massive young stellar object G323.46 -0.08
V. Wolf, B. Stecklum, A. Caratti o Garatti, P. A. Boley, Ch. Fischer,, T. Harries, J. Eisl\"offel, H. Linz, A. Ahmadi, J. Kobus, X. Haubois, A., Matter, P. Cruzalebes

TL;DR
This paper confirms a significant accretion burst in the massive young stellar object G323.46-0.08, characterizes its properties using radiative transfer modeling, and discusses its implications for massive star formation and maser activity.
Contribution
The study provides the first detailed analysis of an MYSO accretion burst using time-dependent radiative transfer and confirms the event with multi-wavelength observations, expanding understanding of massive star formation.
Findings
The G323 burst peaked in late 2013/early 2014 with a 2.5 mag increase in Ks-band.
Far-infrared flux increased by about 14% at 70 μm and 8.5% at 160 μm two years after the burst.
The burst released approximately 0.9×10^47 erg, indicating a significant accretion event.
Abstract
Accretion bursts from low-mass young stellar objects (YSOs) are known for many decades. In recent years, the first accretion bursts of massive YSOs (MYSOs) have been observed. These phases of intense protostellar growth are of particular importance for studying massive star formation. Bursts of MYSOs are accompanied by flares of Class II methanol masers (hereafter masers), caused by an increase in exciting mid-infrared (MIR) emission. The G323.460.08 (hereafter G323) event extends the small sample of known MYSO bursts. Maser observations of the MYSO G323 show evidence of a flare, which was presumed to be caused by an accretion burst. This should be verified with IR data. We used time-dependent radiative transfer (TDRT) to characterize the heating and cooling timescales for eruptive MYSOs and to infer the main burst parameters. The G323 accretion burst is confirmed. It reached its…
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