T. Giannini et al. 2009 ApJ 704 606 doi:10.1088/0004-637X/704/1/606
T. Giannini1, D. Lorenzetti1, D. Elia2,3, F. Strafella3, M. De Luca1,4, G. Fazio5, M. Marengo5, B. Nisini1 and H. A. Smith5
Show affiliationsWe present a study of the infrared variability of young stellar objects by means of two Spitzer-IRAC images of the Vela Molecular Cloud D (VMR-D) obtained in observations separated in time by about six months. By using the same space-born IR instrumentation, this study eliminates all the unwanted effects due to differences in sensitivity, confusion, saturation, calibration, and filter bandpasses, issues that are usually unavoidable when comparing catalogs obtained from different instruments. The VMR-D map covers about 1.5 deg2 of a site where star formation is actively ongoing. We are interested in accreting pre-main sequence variables whose luminosity variations are due to intermittent events of disk accretion (i.e., active T Tauri stars and EXor-type objects). The variable objects have been selected from a catalog of more than 170,000 sources detected at an S/N ≥ 5. We then searched the sample of variables for ones whose photometric properties such as IR excess, color-magnitude relationships, and spectral energy distribution, are as close as possible to those of known EXor's. Indeed, the latter are monitored in a more systematic way than T Tauri stars and the mechanisms that regulate the observed phenomenology are exactly the same. Hence, the modalities of the EXor behavior are adopted as driving criterion for selecting variables in general. We ultimately selected 19 bona fide candidates that constitute a well defined sample of new variable targets for further investigation (monitoring, spectroscopy). Out of these, 10 sources present a Spitzer MIPS 24 μm counterpart, and have been classified as three Class I, five flat spectrum, and two Class II objects, while the spectral energy distribution of the other nine sources is compatible with evolutionary phases older than Class I. This is consistent with what is known about the small sample of known EXor's, whose properties have driven the present selection and suggests that the accretion flaring or EXor stage might come as a ClassI/ClassII transition. We also present new prescriptions that can be useful in future searches for accretion variables in large IR databases.
catalogs; infrared: ISM; infrared: stars; stars: formation; stars: pre-main sequence; stars: variables: other
Issue 1 (2009 October 10)
Received 2009 April 24, accepted for publication 2009 June 29
Published 2009 September 24
T. Giannini et al. 2009 ApJ 704 606
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