438 research outputs found
Measuring Fundamental Parameters of Substellar Objects. II: Masses and Radii
We present mass and radius derivations for a sample of very young, mid- to
late M, low-mass stellar and substellar objects in Upper Sco and Taurus. In a
previous paper, we determined effective temperatures and surface gravities for
these targets, from an analysis of their high-resolution optical spectra and
comparisons to the latest synthetic spectra. We now derive extinctions, radii,
masses and luminosities by combining our previous results with observed
photometry, surface fluxes from the synthetic spectra and the known cluster
distances. These are the first mass and radius estimates for young, very low
mass bodies that are independent of theoretical evolutionary models (though our
estimates do depend on spectral modeling). We find that for most of our sample,
our derived mass-radius and mass-luminosity relationships are in very good
agreement with the theoretical predictions. However, our results diverge from
the evolutionary model values for the coolest, lowest-mass targets: our
inferred radii and luminosities are significantly larger than predicted for
these objects at the likely cluster ages, causing them to appear much younger
than expected. We suggest that uncertainties in the evolutionary models - e.g.,
in the choice of initial conditions and/or treatment of interior convection -
may be responsible for this discrepancy. Finally, two of our late-M objects
(USco 128 and 130) appear to have masses close to the deuterium-fusion boundary
(9--14 Jupiters, within a factor of 2). This conclusion is primarily a
consequence of their considerable faintness compared to other targets with
similar extinction, spectral type and temperature (difference of 1 mag). Our
result suggests that the faintest young late-M or cooler objects may be
significantly lower in mass than the current theoretical tracks indicate.Comment: 54 pages, incl. 5 figs, accepted Ap
High resolution absolute flux profiles of the MC 2 h and k lines in evolved F8 to M5 stars
The central results of a survey of the Mg II resonance line emission in a sample of over 50 evolved late type stars, including spectral-luminosity type F8 to M5 and La to IV are presented. Observed and surface fluxes are derived and correlations noted. The major findings include: (1) Mg II k emission core asymmetry transition near K1 III, analogous to that known for Ca II K; (2) a small gravity and temperature dependence of the Mg II chromospheric radiative loss rate
Accretion-Induced Lithium Line Enhancements in Classical T Tauri Stars: RW Aur
It is widely accepted that much of the stochastic variability of T Tauri
stars is due to accretion by a circumstellar disk. The emission line spectrum
as well as the excess continuum emission are common probes of this process. In
this communication, we present additional probes of the circumstellar
environment in the form of resonance lines of low ionization potential
elements. Using a set of 14 high resolution echelle observations of the
classical T Tauri star (CTTS), RW Aur, taken between 1986 and 1996, we
carefully measure the continuum veiling at each epoch by comparing more than
500 absorption lines with those of an appropriate template. This allows us to
accurately subtract out the continuum emission and to recover the underlying
photospheric spectrum. In doing so, we find that selected photospheric lines
are enhanced by the accretion process, namely the resonance lines of LiI and
KI. A resonance line of TiI and a low excitation potential line of CaI also
show weak enhancements. Simple slab models and computed line bisectors lead us
to propose that these line enhancements are markers of cool gas at the
beginning of the accretion flow which provides an additional source of line
opacity. These results suggest that published values of surface lithium
abundances of classical T Tauri stars are likely to be overestimated. This
would account for the various reports of surface lithium abundances in excess
of meteoritic values among the extreme CTTS. Computing LTE lithium abundances
of RW Aur in a low and then high accretion state yields abundances which vary
by one order of magnitude. The low accretion state lithium abundance is
consistent with theoretical predictions for a star of this age and mass while
the high accretion state spectrum yields a super-meteoritic lithium abundance.Comment: 28 pages, 8 figures, accepted by Ap
X-ray Properties of Pre--Main-Sequence Stars in the Orion Nebula Cluster with Known Rotation Periods
We re-analyze all archival Chandra/ACIS observations of the Orion Nebula
Cluster (ONC) to study the X-ray properties of a large sample of
pre--main-sequence (PMS) stars with optically determined rotation periods. Our
goal is to elucidate the origins of X-rays in PMS stars by seeking out
connections between the X-rays and the mechanisms most likely driving their
production--rotation and accretion. In our sample X-ray luminosity is
significantly correlated with stellar rotation, in the sense of decreasing
Lx/Lbol with more rapid rotation, suggesting that these stars are in the
"super-saturated" regime of the rotation-activity relationship. However, we
also find that stars with optical rotation periods are significantly biased to
high Lx. This is not the result of magnitude bias in the optical
rotation-period sample but rather to the diminishingly small amplitude of
optical variations in stars with low Lx. Evidently, there exists in the ONC a
population of stars whose rotation periods are unknown and that possess lower
average X-ray luminosities than those of stars with known rotation periods.
These stars may sample the linear regime of the rotation-activity relationship.
Accretion also manifests itself in X-rays, though in a somewhat
counterintuitive fashion: While stars with spectroscopic signatures of
accretion show harder X-ray spectra than non-accretors, they show lower X-ray
luminosities and no enhancement of X-ray variability. We interpret these
findings in terms of a common origin for the X-ray emission observed from both
accreting and non-accreting stars, with the X-rays from accreting stars simply
being attenuated by magnetospheric accretion columns. This suggests that X-rays
from PMS stars have their origins primarily in chromospheres, not accretion.Comment: Accepted by the Astronomical Journal. 43 pages, 16 figure
Stellar and Molecular Radii of a Mira Star: First Observations with the Keck Interferometer Grism
Using a new grism at the Keck Interferometer, we obtained spectrally
dispersed (R ~ 230) interferometric measurements of the Mira star R Vir. These
data show that the measured radius of the emission varies substantially from
2.0-2.4 microns. Simple models can reproduce these wavelength-dependent
variations using extended molecular layers, which absorb stellar radiation and
re-emit it at longer wavelengths. Because we observe spectral regions with and
without substantial molecular opacity, we determine the stellar photospheric
radius, uncontaminated by molecular emission. We infer that most of the
molecular opacity arises at approximately twice the radius of the stellar
photosphere.Comment: 12 pages, including 3 figures. Accepted by ApJ
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
Measuring Magnetic Fields in Ultracool Stars and Brown Dwarfs
We present a new method for direct measurement of magnetic fields on
ultracool stars and brown dwarfs. It takes advantage of the Wing-Ford band of
FeH, which are seen throughout the M and L spectral types. These molecular
features are not as blended as other optical molecular bands, are reasonably
strong through most of the spectral range, and exhibit a response to magnetic
fields which is easier to detect than other magnetic diagnostics, including the
usual optical and near-infrared atomic spectral lines that have heretofore been
employed. The FeH bands show a systematic growth as the star gets cooler. We do
not find any contamination by CrH in the relevant spectral region. We are able
to model cool and rapidly-rotating spectra from warmer, slowly-rotating spectra
utilizing an interpolation scheme based on optical depth scaling. We show that
the FeH features can distinguish between negligible, moderate, and high
magnetic fluxes on low-mass dwarfs, with a current accuracy of about one
kilogauss. Two different approaches to extracting the information from the
spectra are developed and compared. Which one is superior depends on a number
of factors. We demostrate the validity of our new procedures by comparing the
spectra of three M stars whose magnetic fluxes are already known from atomic
line analysis. The low and high field stars are used to produce interpolated
moderate-strength spectra which closely resemble the moderate-field star. The
assumption of linear behavior for the magnetic effects appears to be
reasonable, but until the molecular constants are better understood the method
is subject to that assumption, and rather approximate. Nonetheless, it opens a
new regime of very low-mass objects to direct confirmation and testing of their
magnetic dynamos.Comment: 36 preprint pages, accepted for publication in Ap
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