A survey for variable young stars with small telescopes – IX. Evolution of spot properties on YSOs in IC 5070
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Author
Herbert, Carys
Froebrich, Dirk
Vanaverbeke, Siegfried
Scholz, Aleks
Eislöffel, Jochen
Urtly, Thomas
Walton, Ivan L
Wiersema, Klaas
Quinn, Nick J
Piehler, Georg
Aimar, Mario Morales
García, Rafael Castillo
Vanmunster, Tonny
Alfaro, Francisco C Soldán
de la Cuesta, Faustino García
Licchelli, Domenico
Perez, Alex Escartin
Mañanes, Esteban Fernández
Ribes, Noelia Graciá
González, José Luis Salto
Futcher, Stephen R L
Nelson, Tim
Dvorak, Shawn
Moździerski, Dawid
Kotysz, Krzysztof
Mikołajczyk, Przemysław
Fleming, George
Phillips, Mark
Vale, Tony
Dubois, Franky
Eggenstein, Heinz-Bernd
Heald, Michael A
Lewin, Pablo
OKeeffe, Derek
Popowicz, Adam
Bernacki, Krzysztof
Malcher, Andrzej
Lasota, Slawomir
Fiolka, Jerzy
Dustor, Adam
Percy, Stephen C
Devine, Pat
Patel, Aashini L
Dickers, Matthew D
Dover, Lord
Grozdanova, Ivana I
Urquhart, James S
Lynch, Chris J R
Attention
2299/27891
Abstract
We present spot properties on 32 periodic young stellar objects in IC 5070. Long term, ∼5 yr, light curves in the V, R, and I-bands are obtained through the HOYS (Hunting Outbursting Young Stars) citizen science project. These are dissected into 6 months long slices, with 3 months oversampling, to measure 234 sets of amplitudes in all filters. We fit 180 of these with reliable spot solutions. Two thirds of spot solutions are cold spots, the lowest is 2150 K below the stellar temperature. One third are warm spots that are above the stellar temperature by less than ∼2000 K. Cold and warm spots have maximum surface coverage values of 40 per cent, although only 16 per cent of warm spots are above 20 per cent surface coverage as opposed to 60 per cent of the cold spots. Warm spots are most likely caused by a combination of plages and low-density accretion columns, most common on objects without inner disc excess emission in K − W2. Five small hot spot solutions have <3 per cent coverage and are 3000–5000 K above the stellar temperature. These are attributed to accretion, and four of them occur on the same object. The majority of our objects are likely to be accreting. However, we observe very few accretion hot spots as either the accretion is not stable on our time-scale or the photometry is dominated by other features. We do not identify cyclical spot behaviour on the targets. We additionally identify and discuss a number of objects that have interesting amplitudes, phase changes, or spot properties.