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Infrared Variability of Evolved Protoplanetary Disks: Evidence for Scale Height Variations in the Inner Disk

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arxiv 1202.1553 v1 pith:JEBQ7I3O submitted 2012-02-07 astro-ph.GA

Infrared Variability of Evolved Protoplanetary Disks: Evidence for Scale Height Variations in the Inner Disk

classification astro-ph.GA
keywords variabilityinfrareddiskmicronspectroscopystellardisksevolved
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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We present the results of a multi-wavelength multi-epoch survey of five evolved protoplanetary disks in the IC 348 cluster that show significant infrared variability. Using 3-8micron and 24micron photometry along with 5-40micron spectroscopy from the Spitzer Space Telescope, as well as ground-based 0.8-5micron spectroscopy, optical spectroscopy and near-infrared photometry, covering timescales of days to years, we examine the variability in the disk, stellar and accretion flux. We find substantial variations (10-60%) at all infrared wavelengths on timescales of weeks to months for all of these young stellar objects. This behavior is not unique when compared to other cluster members and is consistent with changes in the structure of the inner disk, most likely scale height fluctuations on a dynamical timescale. Previous observations, along with our near-infrared photometry, indicate that the stellar fluxes are relatively constant; stellar variability does not appear to drive the large changes in the infrared fluxes. Based on our near-infrared spectroscopy of the Pa-beta and Br-gamma lines we find that the accretion rates are variable in most of the evolved disks but the overall rates are probably too small to cause the infrared variability. We discuss other possible physical causes for the variability, including the influence of a companion, magnetic fields threading the disk, and X-ray flares.

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