20 research outputs found
A Multiplicity Census of Young Stars in Chamaeleon I
We present the results of a multiplicity survey of 126 stars spanning ~0.1-3
solar masses in the ~2-Myr-old Chamaeleon I star-forming region, based on
adaptive optics imaging with the ESO Very Large Telescope. Our observations
have revealed 30 binaries and 6 triples, of which 19 and 4, respectively, are
new discoveries. The overall multiplicity fraction we find for Cha I (~30%) is
similar to those reported for other dispersed young associations, but
significantly higher than seen in denser clusters and the field, for comparable
samples. Both the frequency and the maximum separation of Cha I binaries
decline with decreasing mass, while the mass ratios approach unity; conversely,
tighter pairs are more likely to be equal mass. We confirm that brown dwarf
companions to stars are rare, even at young ages at wide separations. Based on
follow-up spectroscopy of two low-mass substellar companion candidates, we
conclude that both are likely background stars. The overall multiplicity
fraction in Cha I is in rough agreement with numerical simulations of cloud
collapse and fragmentation, but its observed mass dependence is less steep than
predicted. The paucity of higher-order multiples, in particular, provides a
stringent constraint on the simulations, and seems to indicate a low level of
turbulence in the prestellar cores in Cha I.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Deep search for companions to probable young brown dwarfs
We have obtained high contrast images of four nearby, faint, and very low
mass objects 2MASSJ04351455-1414468, SDSSJ044337.61+000205.1,
2MASSJ06085283-2753583 and 2MASSJ06524851-5741376 (here after 2MASS0435-14,
SDSS0443+00, 2MASS0608-27 and 2MASS0652-57), identified in the field as
probable isolated young brown dwarfs. Our goal was to search for binary
companions down to the planetary mass regime. We used the NAOS-CONICA adaptive
optics instrument (NACO) and its unique capability to sense the wavefront in
the near-infrared to acquire sharp images of the four systems in Ks, with a
field of view of 28"*28". Additional J and L' imaging and follow-up
observations at a second epoch were obtained for 2MASS0652-57. With a typical
contrast DKs= 4.0-7.0 mag, our observations are sensitive down to the planetary
mass regime considering a minimum age of 10 to 120 Myr for these systems. No
additional point sources are detected in the environment of 2MASS0435-14,
SDSS0443+00 and 2MASS0608-27 between 0.1-12" (i.e about 2 to 250 AU at 20 pc).
2MASS0652-57 is resolved as a \sim230 mas binary. Follow-up observations reject
a background contaminate, resolve the orbital motion of the pair, and confirm
with high confidence that the system is physically bound. The J, Ks and L'
photometry suggest a q\sim0.7-0.8 mass ratio binary with a probable semi-major
axis of 5-6 AU. Among the four systems, 2MASS0652-57 is probably the less
constrained in terms of age determination. Further analysis would be necessary
to confirm its youth. It would then be interesting to determine its orbital and
physical properties to derive the system's dynamical mass and to test
evolutionary model predictions.Comment: Research note, 5 pages, 2 tables and 3 figures, accepted to A&
Diagnosing Circumstellar Debris Disks
(Abridged) A numerical model of a circumstellar debris disk is developed and
applied to observations of the circumstellar dust orbiting beta Pictoris. The
model accounts for the rates at which dust is produced by collisions among
unseen planetesimals, and the rate at which dust grains are destroyed due to
collisions. The model also accounts for the effects of radiation pressure,
which is the dominant perturbation on the disk's smaller but abundant dust
grains. Solving the resulting system of rate equations then provides the dust
abundances versus grain size and over time. Those solutions also provide the
dust grains' collisional lifetime versus grain size, and the debris disk's
optical depth and surface brightness versus distance from the star. Comparison
to observations then yields estimates of the unseen planetesimal disk's radius,
and the rate at which the disk sheds mass due to planetesimal grinding.
The model is then applied to optical observations of the edge-on dust disk
orbiting beta Pictoris, and good agreement is achieved when the unseen
planetesimal disk is broad, with 75<r<150 AU. If it is assumed that the dust
grains are bright like Saturn's icy rings, then the cross section of dust in
the disk is A_d~2x10^20 km^2 and its mass is M_d~11 lunar masses. In this case
the planetesimal disk's dust production rate is quite heavy, dM_d/dt~9
earth-masses per Myr, implying that there is or was a substantial amount of
planetesimal mass there, at least 110 earth-masses. But if the dust grains are
darker than assumed, then the planetesimal disk's mass-loss rate and its total
mass are heavier. In fact, the apparent dearth of any major planets in this
region, plus the planetesimal disk's heavy mass-loss rate, suggests that the
75<r<150 AU zone at beta Pic might be a region of planetesimal destruction,
rather than a site of ongoing planet formation.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa
A Keck LGS AO Search for Brown Dwarf and Planetary Mass Companions to Upper Scorpius Brown Dwarfs
We searched for binary companions to 20 young brown dwarfs in the Upper
Scorpius association (145 pc, 5 Myr, nearest OB association) with the the Laser
Guide Star adaptive optics system and the facility infrared camera NIRC2 on the
10 m Keck II telescope. We discovered a 0.14" companion (20.9+-0.4 AU) to the
<0.1 MSun object SCH J16091837-20073523. From spectral deconvolution of
integrated-light near-IR spectroscopy of SCH1609 using the SpeX spectrograph
(Rayner et al. 2003), we estimate primary and secondary spectral types of
M6+-0.5 and M7+-1.0, corresponding to masses of 79+-17 MJup and 55+-25 MJup at
an age of 5 Myr and masses of 84+-15 MJup and 60+-25 MJup at an age of 10 Myr.
For our survey objects with spectral types later than M8, we find an upper
limit on the binary fraction of <9% (1-sigma) at separations of 10 -- 500 AU.
We combine the results of our survey with previous surveys of Upper Sco and
similar young regions to set the strongest constraints to date on binary
fraction for young substellar objects and very low mass stars. The binary
fraction for low mass (<40 MJup) brown dwarfs in Upper Sco is similar to that
for T dwarfs in the field; for higher mass brown dwarfs and very low mass
stars, there is an excess of medium-separation (10-50 AU projected separation)
young binaries with respect to the field. These medium separation binaries will
likely survive to late ages.Comment: 37 pages, 6 figures, accepted to Ap
Astrometric confirmation of young low-mass binaries and multiple systems in the Chamaeleon star-forming regions
The star-forming regions in Chamaeleon are one of the nearest (distance ~165
pc) and youngest (age ~2 Myrs) conglomerates of recently formed stars and the
ideal target for population studies of star formation. We investigate a total
of 16 Cha targets, which have been suggested, but not confirmed as binaries or
multiple systems in previous literature. We used the adaptive optics instrument
Naos-Conica (NACO) at the Very Large Telescope Unit Telescope 4 of the Paranal
Observatory, at 2-5 different epochs, in order to obtain relative and absolute
astrometric measurements, as well as differential photometry in the J, H, and K
band. On the basis of known proper motions and these observations, we analyse
the astrometric results in our "Proper Motion Diagram" (PMD: angular separation
/ position angle versus time), to eliminate possible (non-moving) background
stars, establish co-moving binaries and multiples, and search for curvature as
indications for orbital motion. All previously suggested close components are
co-moving and no background stars are found. The angular separations range
between 0.07 and 9 arcseconds, corresponding to projected distances between the
components of 6-845 AU. Thirteen stars are at least binaries and the remaining
three (RX J0919.4-7738, RX J0952.7-7933, VW Cha) are confirmed high-order
multiple systems with up to four components. In 13 cases, we found significant
slopes in the PMDs, which are compatible with orbital motion whose periods
range from 60 to 550 years. However, in only four cases there are indications
of a curved orbit, the ultimate proof of a gravitational bond. Massive primary
components appear to avoid the simultaneous formation of equal-mass secondary
components. (abridged)Comment: 33 pages, 22 figures, accepted for publication in A&A, 2nd version:
typos and measurement unit added in Table
Interactions between brown-dwarf binaries and Sun-like stars
Several mechanisms have been proposed for the formation of brown dwarfs, but
there is as yet no consensus as to which -- if any -- are operative in nature.
Any theory of brown dwarf formation must explain the observed statistics of
brown dwarfs. These statistics are limited by selection effects, but they are
becoming increasingly discriminating. In particular, it appears (a) that brown
dwarfs that are secondaries to Sun-like stars tend to be on wide orbits, a\ga
100\,{\rm AU} (the Brown Dwarf Desert), and (b) that these brown dwarfs have a
significantly higher chance of being in a close (a\la 10\,{\rm AU}) binary
system with another brown dwarf than do brown dwarfs in the field. This then
raises the issue of whether these brown dwarfs have formed {\it in situ}, i.e.
by fragmentation of a circumstellar disc; or have formed elsewhere and
subsequently been captured. We present numerical simulations of the purely
gravitational interaction between a close brown-dwarf binary and a Sun-like
star. These simulations demonstrate that such interactions have a negligible
chance () of leading to the close brown-dwarf binary being captured by
the Sun-like star. Making the interactions dissipative by invoking the
hydrodynamic effects of attendant discs might alter this conclusion. However,
in order to explain the above statistics, this dissipation would have to favour
the capture of brown-dwarf binaries over single brown-dwarfs, and we present
arguments why this is unlikely. The simplest inference is that most brown-dwarf
binaries -- and therefore possibly also most single brown dwarfs -- form by
fragmentation of circumstellar discs around Sun-like protostars, with some of
them subsequently being ejected into the field.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, Accepted for publication in Astrophysics and
Space Scienc
Exploring the consequences of pairing algorithms for binary stars
Knowledge of the binary population in stellar groupings provides important
information about the outcome of the star forming process in different
environments (see, e.g., Blaauw 1991, and references therein). Binarity is also
a key ingredient in stellar population studies, and is a prerequisite to
calibrate the binary evolution channels. In this paper we present an overview
of several commonly used methods to pair individual stars into binary systems,
which we refer to as pairing functions. These pairing functions are frequently
used by observers and computational astronomers, either for their mathematical
convenience, or because they roughly describe the expected outcome of the star
forming process. We discuss the consequences of each pairing function for the
interpretation of observations and numerical simulations. The binary fraction
and mass ratio distribution generally depend strongly on the selection of the
range in primary spectral type in a sample. The mass ratio distribution and
binary fraction derived from a binarity survey among a mass-limited sample of
targets is thus not representative for the population as a whole. Neither
theory nor observations indicate that random pairing of binary components from
the mass distribution, the simplest pairing function, is realistic. It is more
likely that companion stars are formed in a disk around a star, or that a
pre-binary core fragments into two binary components. The results of our
analysis are important for (i) the interpretation of the observed mass ratio
distribution and binary fraction for a sample of stars, (ii) a range of
possible initial condition algorithms for star cluster simulations, and (iii)
how to discriminate between the different star formation scenarios.Comment: 43 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication in A&
On the binary frequency of the lowest mass members of the pleiades with hubble space telescope wide field camera 3
E. V. Garcia, et al., “On the Binary Frequency of the Lowest mass Members of the Pleiades with Hubble Space Telescope Wide Field Camera 3”, The Astrophysical Journal, Vol. 804(1), May 2015. © 2015. The American Astronomical Society.We present the results of a Hubble Space Telescope Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) imaging survey of 11 of the lowest mass brown dwarfs in the Pleiades known (25-40 MJup). These objects represent the predecessors to T dwarfs in the field. Using a semi-empirical binary point-spread function (PSF)-fitting technique, we are able to probe to 0.″ 03 (0.75 pixel), better than 2x the WFC3/UVIS diffraction limit. We did not find any companions to our targets. From extensive testing of our PSF-fitting method on simulated binaries, we compute detection limits which rule out companions to our targets with mass ratios of 0.7 and separations 4 AU. Thus, our survey is the first to attain the high angular resolution needed to resolve brown dwarf binaries in the Pleiades at separations that are most common in the field population. We constrain the binary frequency over this range of separation and mass ratio of 25-40 MJup Pleiades brown dwarfs to bePeer reviewe
Spectroscopy and kinematics of low-mass members of young moving groups
Original article can be found at: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/ Copyright Royal Astronomical SocietyWe study a target sample of 68 low-mass objects (with spectral types in the range M4.5–L1) previously selected via photometric and astrometric criteria, as possible members of five young moving groups: the Local Association (Pleiades moving group, age = 20–150 Myr), the Ursa Mayor group (Sirius supercluster, age = 300 Myr), the Hyades supercluster (age = 600 Myr), IC 2391 supercluster (age = 35–55 Myr) and the Castor moving group (age = 200 Myr). In this paper, we assess their membership by using different kinematic and spectroscopic criteria. We use high-resolution echelle spectroscopic observations of the sample to measure accurate radial velocities. Distances are calculated and compared to those of the moving group from the literature, we also calculate the kinematic Galactic components (U,V,W) of the candidate members and apply kinematic criterion of membership to each group. In addition, we measure rotational velocities (v sin i) to place further constraints on membership of kinematic members. We find that 49 targets have young disc kinematics and that 36 of them possibly belong to one of our five moving groups. From the young disc target objects, 31 have rotational velocities in agreement with them belonging to the young disc population. We also find that one of our moving group candidates, 2MASS0123−3610, is a low-mass double lined spectroscopic binary, with probable spectral types around M7.Peer reviewe