GASTON-GP: Source catalogue and millimetre variability of massive protostellar objects
Ji-Xuan Zhou, Nicolas Peretto, A. J. Rigby, R. Adam, P. Ade, H. Ajeddig, S. Amarantidis, P. Andr\'e, H. Aussel, A. Bacmann, A. Beelen, A. Beno\^it, S. Berta, M. B\'ethermin, A. Bongiovanni, J. Bounmy, O. Bourrion, M. Calvo, A. Catalano, D. Ch\'erouvrier, M. De Petris

TL;DR
This study used millimetre observations over four years to search for variability in massive protostars, finding no robust evidence of luminosity bursts, highlighting observational limitations and the need for future high-resolution surveys.
Contribution
First large-scale millimetre variability survey of massive protostars, providing observational constraints and emphasizing the need for improved future observations.
Findings
No robust detections of variable protostellar sources.
Observed variability limited by sensitivity and resolution.
Results consistent with simulations predicting rare luminosity bursts.
Abstract
The processes governing protostellar mass growth remain debated, although episodic accretion is now understood as a key feature of protostellar evolution across all masses. Luminosity bursts have been observed in both low- and high-mass protostars, but the overall statistics remain limited, especially for high-mass objects. Over the past decade, numerical simulations of high-mass core collapse have provided a theoretical framework for interpreting protostellar variability, yet additional observational constraints are required to determine the characteristics and importance of bursts. In this work, we analyse data from GASTON-GP programme, which mapped a 2.4 square degrees region of the Galactic plane (centred at l = 24 deg) at 1.15 and 2.00 mm using NIKA2 on the IRAM 30 m telescope. The survey obtained 11 epochs over four years, offering the first opportunity to study millimetre…
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