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A&A 461, 183-195 (2007)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20065489
Results of the ROTOR-program
I. The long-term photometric variability of classical T Tauri stars
K. N. Grankin1, S. Yu. Melnikov1, J. Bouvier2, W. Herbst3, and V. S. Shevchenko11 Astronomical Institute of the Uzbek Academy of Sciences, Tashkent 700052, Uzbekistan
2 Laboratoire d'Astrophysique, Observatoire de Grenoble, Universit Joseph Fourier, BP 53, 38041 Grenoble Cedex 9, France
3 Astronomy Department, Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT 06459, USA
(Received 24 April 2006 / Accepted 15 September 2006)
Abstract
Context.T Tauri stars exhibit variability on all timescales, whose
origin is still debated.
Aims.We investigate the long term variability
of CTTs over up to 20 years, characterize it from a set of
statistical parameters and discuss its origin.
Methods.We present a unique,
homogeneous database of photometric measurements for Classical T
Tauri stars extending up to 20 years. The database contains more
than 21 000 UBVR observations of 72 CTTs. All the data were
collected within the framework of the ROTOR-program at Mount
Maidanak Observatory (Uzbekistan) and together they constitute the
longest homogeneous, accurate record of TTS variability ever
assembled. We characterize the long term photometric variations of
49 CTTs with sufficient data to allow a robust statistical
analysis and propose an empirical classification scheme.
Results.Several
patterns of long term photometric variability are identified. The
most common pattern, exhibited by a group of 15 stars which includes
T Tau itself, consists of low level variability (
mag) with no significant changes occurring from season to
season over many years. A related subgroup of 22 stars exhibits a
similar stable long term variability pattern, though with larger
amplitudes (up to
mag). Besides these
representative groups, we identify three smaller groups of 3-5 stars
each which have distinctive photometric properties.
Conclusions.The long term
variability of most CTTs is fairly stable and merely reflects
shorter term variability due to cold and hot surface spots. Only
a small fraction of CTTs undergo significant brightness changes on
the long term (months, years), which probably arise from slowly
varying circumstellar extinction.
Key words: stars: activity -- stars: pre-main-sequence -- stars: variables: general
© ESO 2006
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