Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2248/8949
Title: Gaia24ccy: An outburst followed the footsteps of its predecessor
Authors: Singh, Koshvendra
Ninan, J. P
Guo, Zhen
Ivanov, Valentin D
Buckley, David A. H
Ojha, D. K
Monson, Andrew
Chand, Tarak
Sharma, S
Yadav, Ram Kesh
Sahu, D. K
Kumar, Pramod
Elbakyan, Vardan
Nayakshin, Sergei
Fermiano, Vitor
Fang, Min
Borissova, Jura
Chen, Wen Ping
Hambsch, Franz-Josef
Kurtev, Radostin
Morris, Calum
Osses, Javier
Rodríguez, Vania
Sharma, Tanvi
Bandari, Srikanth
Thanathibodee, Thanawuth
Wang, Wei-Hao
Zhou, Yuting
Keywords: Optical bursts
FU orionis stars
Stellar accretion disks
Protoplanetary disks
Issue Date: 20-Mar-2026
Publisher: American Astronomical Society
Citation: The Astrophysical Journal, Vol. 1000, No. 1, 112
Abstract: Accretion-driven outbursts in young stellar objects remain poorly understood, largely limited by a statistically small sample of closely followed-up events. This underscores the importance of a thorough exploration of each outbursting object. We studied a peculiar outbursting system, Gaia24ccy, which exhibited two ∆g ∼ 3.8 mag outbursts in 2019 and 2024. The system consists of two unresolved, nearly identical, and rapidly rotating young stars: Gaia24ccy A (1.1419 days) and Gaia24ccy B (1.7898 days). Periodogram analyses just before the onset of the outbursts suggest Gaia24ccy B to be the outbursting component. Unlike any previously known EXor sources, the two outburst profiles show very similar evolution: both rose at the same rate for the first 15 days, followed by multiple "subbursts" on timescales of 10−20 days. The 2019 outburst lasted 145─255 days, while the 2024 outburst persisted for 367 days. We infer the unstable region to lie at rtrigger ≃ 0.019─0.047 au (∼5─12.3R⋆). The accreted mass per event, Macc ∼ 10−5 M⊙, can be provided by a compact inner-disk reservoir. The photometric rise and decay timescales, together with the mid-infrared (MIR) color evolution, favor a thermal─viscous trigger in a hot inner disk, while the presence of rich emission-line spectra indicates concurrent magnetospheric compression—together forming a hybrid picture. Finally, we explain the reddening of the MIR color observed during the outburst as a consequence of the competing emission from the viscous disk and the photosphere.
Description: Open Access
Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 licence. Any further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the title of the work, journal citation and DOI.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2248/8949
ISSN: 1538-4357
Appears in Collections:IIAP Publications

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