Abstract

The variability of young stellar objects (YSO) changes their brightness and color preventing a proper classification in traditional color-color and color magnitude diagrams. We have explored the feasibility of the flux variation gradient (FVG) method for YSOs, using $H$ and $K$ band monitoring data of the star forming region RCW\,38 obtained at the University Observatory Bochum in Chile. Simultaneous multi-epoch flux measurements follow a linear relation $F_{H}=\alpha + \beta \cdot F_{K}$ for almost all YSOs with large variability amplitude. The slope $\beta$ gives the mean $HK$ color temperature $T_{var}$ of the varying component. Because $T_{var}$ is hotter than the dust sublimation temperature, we have tentatively assigned it to stellar variations. If the gradient does not meet the origin of the flux-flux diagram, an additional non- or less-varying component may be required. If the variability amplitude is larger at the shorter wavelength, e.g. $\alpha < 0$, this component is cooler than the star (e.g. a circumstellar disk); vice versa, if $\alpha > 0$, the component is hotter like a scattering halo or even a companion star. We here present examples of two YSOs, where the $HK$ FVG implies the presence of a circumstellar disk; this finding is consistent with additional data at $J$ and $L$. One YSO shows a clear $K$-band excess in the $JHK$ color-color diagram, while the significance of a $K$-excess in the other YSO depends on the measurement epoch. Disentangling the contributions of star and disk it turns out that the two YSOs have huge variability amplitudes ($\sim 3-5$\,mag). The $HK$ FVG analysis is a powerful complementary tool to analyze the varying components of YSOs and worth further exploration of monitoring data at other wavelengths.

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