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A survey for variable young stars with small telescopes – IV. Rotation periods of YSOs in IC 5070

Authors :
Alejandra Traspas Munia
Igor Kudzej
Geoffrey Stone
Mark C. Price
P. Mikołajczyk
S. J. Billington
Barry Merrikin
Alfred Kume
Carys Herbert
Mario Morales Aimar
Esteban Fernández Mañanes
Steve Rau
Timothy P. Long
Tarik Zegmott
Franky Dubois
Bringfried Stecklum
Tim Nelson
Tonny Vanmunster
George Fleming
Efthymia Derezea
Nick Quinn
Rafael Gonzalez Farfán
Krzysztof Kotysz
Klaas Wiersema
Rafael Castillo García
Francisco C. Soldán Alfaro
Georg Piehler
Domenico Licchelli
Mark M. Phillips
Jochen Eislöffel
Jack J. Evitts
T. Killestein
Heinz-Bernd Eggenstein
Michael A. Heald
Diego Rodríguez
Pavol A. Dubovský
Thomas Urtly
Marc Deldem
Erik Schwendeman
D. Moździerski
Aleks Scholz
Katarzyna Kowalska
Siegfried Vanaverbeke
J. Campbell-White
Niall Miller
Ludwig Logie
Dirk Froebrich
S. V. Makin
Roger D. Pickard
Lord Dover
Stephen R. L. Futcher
Tony Vale
Stephen Johnstone
University of St Andrews. School of Physics and Astronomy
University of St Andrews. St Andrews Centre for Exoplanet Science
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Studying rotational variability of young stars is enabling us to investigate a multitude of properties of young star-disk systems. We utilise high cadence, multi-wavelength optical time series data from the Hunting Outbursting Young Stars citizen science project to identify periodic variables in the Pelican Nebula (IC5070). A double blind study using nine different period-finding algorithms was conducted and a sample of 59 periodic variables was identified. We find that a combination of four period finding algorithms can achieve a completeness of 85% and a contamination of 30% in identifying periods in inhomogeneous data sets. The best performing methods are periodograms that rely on fitting a sine curve. Utilising GaiaEDR3 data, we have identified an unbiased sample of 40 periodic YSOs, without using any colour or magnitude selections. With a 98.9% probability we can exclude a homogeneous YSO period distribution. Instead we find a bi-modal distribution with peaks at three and eight days. The sample has a disk fraction of 50%, and its statistical properties are in agreement with other similarly aged YSOs populations. In particular, we confirm that the presence of the disk is linked to predominantly slow rotation and find a probability of 4.8$\times$10$^{-3}$ that the observed relation between period and presence of a disk has occurred by chance. In our sample of periodic variables, we also find pulsating giants, an eclipsing binary, and potential YSOs in the foreground of IC5070.<br />Comment: 25 pages, 14 figures, 5 tables, accepted for publication in MNRAS

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00358711
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....307f9345f22fe82de46de2cc5f9a1929