A survey for variable young stars with small telescopes – VIII. Properties of 1687 Gaia selected members in 21 nearby clusters
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Author
Froebrich, Dirk
Scholz, Aleks
Campbell-White, Justyn
Vanaverbeke, Siegfried
Herbert, Carys
Eislöffel, Jochen
Urtly, Thomas
Long, Timothy P
Walton, Ivan L
Wiersema, Klaas
Quinn, Nick J
Rodda, Tony
González-Carballo, Juan-Luis
Morales Aimar, Mario
Castillo García, Rafael
Soldán Alfaro, Francisco C
García de la Cuesta, Faustino
Licchelli, Domenico
Escartin Perez, Alex
Salto González, José Luis
Deldem, Marc
Futcher, Stephen R L
Nelson, Tim
Dvorak, Shawn
Moździerski, Dawid
Kotysz, Krzysztof
Mikołajczyk, Przemysław
Fleming, George
Phillips, Mark
Vale, Tony
Öğmen, Yenal
Dubois, Franky
Rolfe, Samantha M
Campbell, David A
Eggenstein, Heinz-Bernd
Hambsch, Franz-Josef
Heald, Michael A
Lewin, Pablo
Rose, Adam C
Stone, Geoffrey
Crow, Martin Valentine
Dawes, Simon Francis
OKeeffe, Derek
Popowicz, Adam
Bernacki, Krzysztof
Malcher, Andrzej
Lasota, Slawomir
Fiolka, Jerzy
Dustor, Adam
Vajpayee, Amritanshu
Devine, Pat
Kolb, Matthias
Marquette, Jean-Baptiste
Ruppel, Gregg L
Crowson, Dan R
da Silva, Cledison Marcos
Michaud, Michel
Patel, Aashini L
Dickers, Matthew D
Dover, Lord
Grozdanova, Ivana I
Urquhart, James S
Lynch, Chris J R
Attention
2299/28207
Abstract
The Hunting Outbursting Young Stars (HOYS) project performs long-term, optical, multifilter, high cadence monitoring of 25 nearby young clusters and star-forming regions. Utilizing Gaia DR3 data, we have identified about 17 000 potential young stellar members in 45 coherent astrometric groups in these fields. Twenty one of them are clear young groups or clusters of stars within 1 kpc and they contain 9143 Gaia selected potential members. The cluster distances, proper motions, and membership numbers are determined. We analyse long-term (≈ 7 yr) V-, R-, and I-band light curves from HOYS for 1687 of the potential cluster members. One quarter of the stars are variable in all three optical filters, and two-thirds of these have light curves that are symmetric around the mean. Light curves affected by obscuration from circumstellar materials are more common than those affected by accretion bursts, by a factor of 2–4. The variability fraction in the clusters ranges from 10 per cent to almost 100 per cent, and correlates positively with the fraction of stars with detectable inner discs, indicating that a lot of variability is driven by the disc. About one in six variables shows detectable periodicity, mostly caused by magnetic spots. Two-thirds of the periodic variables with disc excess emission are slow rotators, and amongst the stars without disc excess two-thirds are fast rotators – in agreement with rotation being slowed down by the presence of a disc.