학술논문

The 2022–2023 accretion outburst of the young star V1741 Sgr.
Document Type
Article
Source
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. Apr2024, Vol. 529 Issue 3, p2630-2646. 17p.
Subject
*STARS
*SPECTRAL energy distribution
*LIGHT sources
*OPTICAL spectroscopy
*INFRARED spectroscopy
*PHOTOMETRY
*SURFACE brightness (Astronomy)
*STELLAR spectra
Language
ISSN
0035-8711
Abstract
V1741 Sgr (= SPICY 71482/Gaia22dtk) is a Classical T Tauri star on the outskirts of the Lagoon Nebula. After at least a decade of stability, in mid-2022, the optical source brightened by ∼3 mag over 2 months, remained bright until early 2023, then dimmed erratically over the next 4 months. This event was monitored with optical and infrared spectroscopy and photometry. Spectra from the peak (October 2022) indicate an EX Lup-type (EXor) accretion outburst, with strong emission from H  i , He  i , and Ca  ii lines and CO bands. At this stage, spectroscopic absorption features indicated a temperature of T ∼ 4750 K with low-gravity lines (e.g. Ba  ii and Sr  ii). By April 2023, with the outburst beginning to dim, strong TiO absorption appeared, indicating a cooler T ∼ 3600 K temperature. However, once the source had returned to its pre-outburst flux in August 2023, the TiO absorption and the CO emission disappeared. When the star went into outburst, the source's spectral energy distribution became flatter, leading to bluer colours at wavelengths shorter than ∼1.6 |$\mu$| m and redder colours at longer wavelengths. The brightening requires a continuum emitting area larger than the stellar surface, likely from optically thick circumstellar gas with cooler surface layers producing the absorption features. Additional contributions to the outburst spectrum may include blue excess from hotspots on the stellar surface, emission lines from diffuse gas, and reprocessed emission from the dust disc. Cooling of the circumstellar gas would explain the appearance of TiO, which subsequently disappeared once this gas had faded and the stellar spectrum reemerged. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]