The Radiowave Hunt for Young Stellar Object Emission and Demographics (RADIOHEAD): A Radio Luminosity-Spectral Type Dependence in Taurus-Auriga YSOs

Abstract

We measure the radio continuum fluxes at the locations of all Gaia-confirmed members of Taurus-Auriga using Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array Sky Survey data (VLASS; 2-4 GHz, σVLASS110-140 μJy, 2.5'' resolution) spanning 3 VLASS epochs (2019, 2021, and 2023). We present 35 detections coincident with young Taurus-Auriga stars (29 in individual VLASS images, 6 via stacking). We find a strong dependence on spectral type, wherein the fractional detection rate of radio emission coincident with early-type young stellar objects (YSOs) is systematically higher than late-type YSOs, ranging from 25% 13% for B-F YSOs, 21% 11% for G YSOs, 18.4% 6.3% for K0-K4 YSOs, 15.5% 5.4% for K5-K9 YSOs, 7.0% 2.7% for M0-M2 YSOs, 2.3% 0.9% for M3-M6 YSOs, and 1.9% 1.9% for YSOs with SpTs later than M7. We present cumulative density distributions of radio luminosity densities that demonstrate a significant luminosity enhancement for early- versus late-type YSOs. We find 25% of the detected sources to be significantly variable. We discuss possible interpretations of this dependence, which may reflect stellar magnetic activity, binary interactions, or stellar flaring. We find that mid-infrared YSO class is a strong indicator of radio detectability consistent with higher frequency Taurus-Auriga VLA surveys, with class III stars detected at a rate of 8.8% 1.6%, class IIs at 2.0% 1.2%, and combined class 0s, Is and Fs at 8.0% 5.4%.

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