Discovery of a Long-Lived, High Amplitude Dusty Infrared Transient
astro-ph.SR
/ Authors
C. T. Britt, T. J. Maccarone, J. D. Green, P. G. Jonker, R. I. Hynes, M. A. P. Torres, J. Strader, L. Chomiuk, R. Salinas, P. Lucas
and 8 more authors
C. Contreras Pena, R. Kurtev, C. Heinke, L. Smith, N. J. Wright, C. Johnson, D. Steeghs, G. Nelemans
/ Abstract
We report the detection of an infrared selected transient which has lasted at least 5 years, first identified by a large mid-infrared and optical outburst from a faint X-ray source detected with the Chandra X-ray Observatory. In this paper we rule out several scenarios for the cause of this outburst, including a classical nova, a luminous red nova, AGN flaring, a stellar merger, and intermediate luminosity optical transients, and interpret this transient as the result of a Young Stellar Object (YSO) of at least solar mass accreting material from the remains of the dusty envelope from which it formed, in isolation from either a dense complex of cold gas or massive star formation. This object does not fit neatly into other existing categories of large outbursts of YSOs (FU Orionis types) which may be a result of the object's mass, age, and environment. It is also possible that this object is a new type of transient unrelated to YSOs.