Bibcode
Juhász, A.; Dullemond, C. P.; van Boekel, R.; Bouwman, J.; Ábrahám, P.; Acosta-Pulido, J. A.; Henning, Th.; Kóspál, A.; Sicilia-Aguilar, A.; Jones, A.; Moór, A.; Mosoni, L.; Regály, Zs.; Szokoly, Gy.; Sipos, N.
Bibliographical reference
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 744, Issue 2, article id. 118 (2012).
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1
2012
Journal
Citations
59
Refereed citations
52
Description
EX Lup is the prototype of the EXor class of eruptive young stars. These
objects show optical outbursts which are thought to be related to
runaway accretion onto the star. In a previous study we observed in situ
crystal formation in the disk of EX Lup during its latest outburst in
2008, making the object an ideal laboratory to investigate circumstellar
crystal formation and transport. This outburst was monitored by a
campaign of ground-based and Spitzer Space Telescope observations. Here
we modeled the spectral energy distribution (SED) of EX Lup in the
outburst from optical to millimeter wavelengths with a two-dimensional
radiative transfer code. Our results showed that the shape of the SED at
optical wavelengths was more consistent with a single-temperature
blackbody than a temperature distribution. We also found that this
single-temperature component emitted 80%-100% of the total accretion
luminosity. We concluded that a thermal instability, the most widely
accepted model of EXor outbursts, was likely not the triggering
mechanism of the 2008 outburst of EX Lup. Our mid-infrared Spitzer
spectra revealed that the strength of all crystalline bands between 8
and 30 μm increased right after the end of the outburst. Six months
later, however, the crystallinity in the 10 μm silicate feature
complex decreased. Our modeling of the mid-infrared spectral evolution
of EX Lup showed that, although vertical mixing should be stronger
during the outburst than in the quiescent phase, fast radial transport
of crystals (e.g., by stellar/disk wind) was required to reproduce the
observed mid-infrared spectra.
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