647 research outputs found
Magnetic-field measurements of T Tauri stars in the Orion Nebula cluster
We present an analysis of high-resolution () infrared K-band
echelle spectra of 14 T Tauri stars in the Orion Nebula Cluster. We model
Zeeman broadening in three magnetically sensitive \ion{Ti}{1} lines near $2.2\
\mu$m and consistently detect kilogauss-level magnetic fields in the stellar
photospheres. The data are consistent in each case with the entire stellar
surface being covered with magnetic fields, suggesting that magnetic pressure
likely dominates over gas pressure in the photospheres of these stars. These
very strong magnetic fields might themselves be responsible for the
underproduction of X-ray emission of T Tauri stars relative to what is expected
based on main-sequence star calibrations. We combine these results with
previous measurements of 14 stars in Taurus and 5 stars in the TW Hydrae
association to study the potential variation of magnetic-field properties
during the first 10 million years of stellar evolution, finding a steady
decline in total magnetic flux with age.Comment: 34 pages, 17 figures, published in ApJ, 2011, 729, 8
Possible detection of a magnetic field in T Tauri
Medium-resolution circular spectropolarimetry of T Tauri is
presented. The star was observed twice: on November 11, 1996 and January 22,
2002. Weak circular polarization has been found in photospheric absorption
lines, indicating a mean surface longitudinal magnetic field of
G and G at the epoch of the first and second
observations respectively. While these values are near the detection limit of
our apparatus, we belive that they are real. In any case one can conclude from
our data that of T Tau does not significantly exceed 200 G, which is
much less than surface magnetic field strength of the star ( kG) found by
Guenther et al. (1999) and Johns-Krull et al. (2000). We discuss possible
reasons of this difference.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
How Hot is the Wind from TW Hydrae?
It has recently been suggested that the winds from Classical T Tauri stars in
general, and the wind from TW Hya in particular, reaches temperatures of at
least 300,000 K while maintaing a mass loss rate of \Msol
yr or larger. If confirmed, this would place strong new requirements on
wind launching and heating models. We therefore re-examine spectra from the
Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph aboard the Hubble Space Telescope and
spectra from the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer satellite in an effort
to better constrain the maximum temperature in the wind of TW Hya. We find
clear evidence for a wind in the \ion{C}{2} doublet at 1037 \AA and in the
\ion{C}{2} multiplet at 1335 \AA. We find no wind absorption in the \ion{C}{4}
1550 \AA doublet observed at the same time as the \ion{C}{2} 1335 \AA line or
in observations of \ion{O}{6} observed simultaneously with the \ion{C}{2} 1037
\AA line. The presence or absence of \ion{C}{3} wind absorption is ambiguous.
The clear lack of a wind in the \ion{C}{4} line argues that the wind from TW
Hya does not reach the 100,000 K characteristic formation temperature of this
line. We therefore argue that the available evidence suggests that the wind
from TW Hya, and probably all classical T Tauri stars, reaches a maximum
temperature in the range of 10,000 -- 30,000 K.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figures, Figure 1 in 2nd version fixes a small velocity
scaling error and new revision adds a reference to an additional paper
recently foun
A Young Planet Search in Visible and IR Light: DN Tau, V836 Tau, and V827 Tau
In searches for low-mass companions to late-type stars, correlation between
radial velocity variations and line bisector slope changes indicates
contamination by large starspots. Two young stars demonstrate that this test is
not sufficient to rule out starspots as a cause of radial velocity variations.
As part of our survey for substellar companions to T Tauri stars, we identified
the ~2 Myr old planet host candidates DN Tau and V836 Tau. In both cases,
visible light radial velocity modulation appears periodic and is uncorrelated
with line bisector span variations, suggesting close companions of several
M_Jup in these systems. However, high-resolution, infrared spectroscopy shows
that starspots cause the radial velocity variations. We also report unambiguous
results for V827 Tau, identified as a spotted star on the basis of both visible
light and infrared spectroscopy. Our results suggest that infrared follow up
observations are critical for determining the source of radial velocity
modulation in young, spotted stars.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal Letter
A Consistent Model of the Accretion Shock Region in Classical T Tauri Stars
We develop a consistent model of the accretion shock region in Classical T Tauri Stars (CTTSs). The initial conditions of the post-shock flow are determined by the irradiated shock precursor and the ionization state is calculated without assuming ionization equilibrium. Comparison with observations of the C IV resonance lines (λλ 1550 Ă
) for CTTSs indicate that the post-shock emission predicted by the model is too large, for a reasonable range of parameters. If the model is to reproduce the observations, C IV emission from CTTSs has to be dominated by pre-shock emission, for stars with moderate to large accretion rates. For stars with low accretion rates, the observations suggest a comparable contribution between the pre- and post-shock regions. These conclusions are consistent with previous results indicating that the post-shock will be buried under the stellar photosphere for moderate to large accretion rates
Starspot-induced optical and infrared radial velocity variability in T Tauri star Hubble 4
We report optical (6150 Ang) and K-band (2.3 micron) radial velocities
obtained over two years for the pre-main sequence weak-lined T Tauri star
Hubble I 4. We detect periodic and near-sinusoidal radial velocity variations
at both wavelengths, with a semi-amplitude of 1395\pm94 m/s in the optical and
365\pm80 m/s in the infrared. The lower velocity amplitude at the longer
wavelength, combined with bisector analysis and spot modeling, indicates that
there are large, cool spots on the stellar surface that are causing the radial
velocity modulation. The radial velocities maintain phase coherence over
hundreds of days suggesting that the starspots are long-lived. This is one of
the first active stars where the spot-induced velocity modulation has been
resolved in the infrared.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journa
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