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A&A 470, 211-219 (2007)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20066108
The outburst of the eruptive young star OO Serpentis between 1995 and 2006
Á. Kóspál1, P. Ábrahám1, T. Prusti2, J. Acosta-Pulido3, S. Hony4, A. Moór1, and R. Siebenmorgen51 Konkoly Observatory of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, PO Box 67, 1525 Budapest, Hungary
e-mail: kospal@konkoly.hu
2 ESTEC/SCI-SAF, Postbus 299, 2200 AG Noordwijk, The Netherlands
3 Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias, 38205 La Laguna, Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain
4 Instituut voor Sterrenkunde, K.U. Leuven, Celestijnenlaan 200B, 3001 Leuven, Belgium
5 European Southern Observatory, Karl-Schwarzschild-Strasse 2, 85748 Garching, Germany
(Received 25 July 2006 / Accepted 22 April 2007)
Abstract
Aims.OO Serpentis is a deeply embedded pre-main sequence star in the
Serpens NW star-forming region. The star went into outburst in 1995
and gradually faded afterwards. In many respects its eruption
resembled the well-known FU Orionis-type (FUor) or EX Lupi-type (EXor)
outbursts. Since very few such events have ever been documented at
infrared wavelengths, our aim is to study the temporal evolution of
OO Ser in the infrared.
Methods.OO Ser was monitored with the Infrared Space Observatory in
the
m wavelength range, starting 4 months after
peak brightness and covering a period of 20 months. Eight years later,
in 2004-2006 we again observed OO Ser at 2.2 and
m from
the ground and complemented this dataset with archival Spitzer
observations also from 2004. We analysed these data with special
attention to source confusion and constructed light curves at 10 different wavelengths as well as spectral energy distributions.
Results.The outburst caused brightening in the whole infrared regime.
According to the infrared light curves, OO Ser started a
wavelength-independent fading after the peak brightness. Later the
flux decay became slower but stayed practically
wavelength-independent. The fading is still ongoing, and current
fading rates indicate that OO Ser will not return to quiescent state
before 2011. The outburst timescale of OO Ser seems to be shorter
than that of FUors, but longer than that of EXors.
Conclusions.The outburst timescale and the moderate luminosity suggest that
OO Ser is different from both FUors and EXors, and shows some
similarities to the recently erupted young star V1647 Ori. Based on
its SED and bolometric temperature, OO Ser seems to be an early class
I object, with an age of <
yr. As proposed by
outburst models, the object is probably surrounded by an accretion
disc and a dense envelope. This picture is also supported by the
wavelength-independence of the fading. Due to the shorter outburst
timescales, models developed for FUors can only work for OO Ser if
the viscosity parameter in the circumstellar disc,
, is set to
an order of magnitude higher value than usual for FUors.
Key words: stars: pre-main sequence -- stars: circumstellar matter -- infrared: stars -- stars: individual: OO Serpentis
© ESO 2007
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