81 research outputs found
Explaining UXOR variability with self-shadowed disks
In this Letter we propose a new view on UX Orionis type variability. The idea
is based on the earlier proposal by various authors that UXORs are
nearly-edge-on disks in which hydrodynamic fluctuations could cause clumps of
dust and gas to cross the line of sight. However, because the standard disk
models have a flaring geometry, it is mostly the outer regions of the disk that
obscure the star. The time scales for such obscuration events would be too long
to match the observed time scales of weeks to months. Recent 2-D
self-consistent models of Herbig Ae/Be protoplanetary disks (Dullemond et al.
2002,2003 henceforth D02/DD03), however, have indicated that for Herbig Ae/Be
star disks there exists, in addition to the usual flared disks, also a new
class of disks: those that are fully self-shadowed. Only their puffed-up inner
rim (at the dust evaporation radius) is directly irradiated by the star, while
the disk at larger radius resides in the shadow of the rim. For these disks
there exist inclinations at which the line of sight towards the star skims the
upper parts of the puffed-up inner rim, while passing high over the surface of
outer disk regions. Small hydrodynamic fluctuations in the puffed-up inner rim
could then be held responsible for the extinction events seen in UXORs. If this
idea is correct, it makes a prediction for the shape of the SEDs of these
stars. It was shown by D02/DD03 that flared disks have a strong far-IR excess
and can be classified as `group I' (in the classification of Meeus et al.
2001), while self-shadowed disks have a relatively weak far-IR excess and are
classified as `group II'. Our model therefore predicts that UXORs belong to the
`group II' sources. We show that this correlation is indeed found within a
sample of 86 Herbig Ae/Be stars.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ Letters (a few lines added to
original version to accommodate comments of referee
Blue Variable Stars from the MACHO database I: Photometry and Spectroscopy of the LMC sample
We present the photometric properties of 1279 blue variable stars within the
LMC. Photometry is derived from the MACHO database. The lightcurves of the
sample exhibit a variety of quasi-periodic and aperiodic outburst behavior. A
characteristic feature of the photometric variation is that the objects are
reddest when at maximum outburst. A subset of 102 objects were examined
spectroscopically. Within this subset, 91% exhibited Balmer emission in at
least one epoch, in some cases with spectacular spectral variability. The
variability observed in the sample is consistent with the establishment and
maintenance of the Be phenomenon.Comment: 19 pages, AJ accepte
Chiral and herringbone symmetry breaking in water-surface monolayers
We report the observation from monolayers of eicosanoic acid in the LâČ2 phase of three distinct out-of-plane first-order diffraction peaks, indicating molecular tilt in a nonsymmetry direction and hence the absence of mirror symmetry. At lower pressures the molecules tilt in the direction of their nearest neighbors. In this region we find a structural transition, which we tentatively identify as the rotator-herringbone transition L2dâL2h
Relation between the luminosity of young stellar objects and their circumstellar environment
We present a new model-independent method of comparison of NIR visibility
data of YSOs. The method is based on scaling the measured baseline with the
YSO's distance and luminosity, which removes the dependence of visibility on
these two variables. We use this method to compare all available NIR visibility
data and demonstrate that it distinguishes YSOs of luminosity >1000L_sun
(low-L) from YSOs of <1000L_sun (high-L). This confirms earlier suggestions,
based on fits of image models to the visibility data, for the difference
between the NIR sizes of these two luminosity groups. When plotted against the
``scaled'' baseline, the visibility creates the following data clusters: low-L
Herbig Ae/Be stars, T Tauri stars, and high-L Herbig Be stars. The T Tau
cluster is similar to the low-L Herbig Ae/Be cluster, which has ~7 times
smaller ``scaled'' baselines than the high-L Herbig Be cluster. We model the
shape and size of clusters with different image models and find that low-L
Herbig stars are the best explained by the uniform brightness ring and the halo
model, T Tauri stars with the halo model, and high-L Herbig stars with the
accretion disk model. However, the plausibility of each model is not well
established. Therefore, we try to build a descriptive model of the
circumstellar environment consistent with various observed properties of YSOs.
We argue that low-L YSOs have optically thick disks with the optically thin
inner dust sublimation cavity and an optically thin dusty outflow above the
inner disk regions. High-L YSOs have optically thick accretion disks with high
accretion rates enabling gas to dominate the NIR emission over dust. Although
observations would favor such a description of YSOs, the required dust
distribution is not supported by our current understanding of dust dynamics.Comment: 20 pages, 12 figures, Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
Inner disc rearrangement revealed by dramatic brightness variations in the young star PV Cep
Young Sun-like stars at the beginning of the pre-main sequence (PMS)
evolution are surrounded by accretion discs and remnant protostellar envelopes.
Photometric and spectroscopic variations of these stars are driven by
interactions of the star with the disc. Time scales and wavelength dependence
of the variability carry information on the physical mechanisms behind these
interactions. We conducted multi-epoch, multi-wavelength study of PV Cep, a
strongly variable, accreting PMS star. By combining our own observations from
2004-2010 with archival and literature data, we show that PV Cep started a
spectacular fading in 2005, reaching an I_C-band amplitude of 4 mag. Analysis
of variation of the optical and infrared fluxes, colour indices, and emission
line fluxes suggests that the photometric decline in 2005-2009 resulted from an
interplay between variable accretion and circumstellar extinction: since the
central luminosity of the system is dominated by accretion, a modest drop in
the accretion rate could induce the drastic restructuring of the inner disc.
Dust condensation in the inner disc region might have resulted in the
enhancement of the circumstellar extinction.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication by MNRAS. 3 online
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VLT/NACO adaptive optics imaging of the TY CrA system - A fourth stellar component candidate detected
We report the detection of a possible subsolar mass companion to the triple
young system TY CrA using the NACO instrument at the VLT UT4 during its
commissioning. Assuming for TY CrA a distance similar to that of the close
binary system HD 176386, the photometric spectral type of this fourth stellar
component candidate is consistent with an ~M4 star. We discuss the dynamical
stability of this possible quadruple system as well as the possible location of
dusty particles inside or outside the system.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures postscrip
Low-resolution spectroscopy and spectral energy distributions of selected sources towards sigma Orionis
Aims: We investigated in detail nine sources in the direction of the young
sigma Orionis cluster, which is considered a unique site for studying stellar
and substellar formation. The nine sources were selected because of some
peculiar properties, such as extremely red infrared colours or too strong
Halpha emission for their blue optical colours. Methods: We took high-quality,
low-resolution spectroscopy (R ~ 500) of the nine targets with ALFOSC at the
Nordic Optical Telescope. We also re-analyzed [24]-band photometry from
MIPS/Spitzer and compiled the best photometry available at the ViJHKs passbands
and the four IRAC/Spitzer channels for constructing accurate spectral energy
distributions covering from 0.55 to 24 mum. Results: The nine targets were
classified into: one Herbig Ae/Be star with a scatterer edge-on disc, two
G-type stars, one X-ray flaring, early-M, young star with chromospheric Halpha
emission, one very low-mass, accreting, young spectroscopic binary, two young
objects at the brown dwarf boundary with the characteristics of classical T
Tauri stars, and two emission-line galaxies, one undergoing star formation, and
another one whose spectral energy distribution is dominated by an active
galactic nucleus. Besides, we discover three infrared sources associated to
overdensities in a cold cloud in the cluster centre. Conclusions:
Low-resolution spectroscopy and spectral energy distributions are a vital tool
for measuring the physical properties and the evolution of young stars and
candidates in the sigma Orionis cluster.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
Magnetospheres and Disk Accretion in Herbig Ae/Be Stars
We present evidence of magnetically-mediated disk accretion in Herbig Ae/Be
stars. Magnetospheric accretion models of Balmer and sodium profiles calculated
with appropriate stellar and rotational parameters are in qualitative agreement
with the observed profiles of the Herbig Ae star UX Ori, and yield a mass
accretion rate of ~ 10^{-8} Msun/yr. If more recent indications of an extremely
large rotation rate for this object are correct, the magnetic field geometry
must deviate from that of a standard dipole in order to produce line emission
consistent with observed flux levels. Models of the associated accretion shock
qualitatively explain the observed distribution of excess fluxes in the Balmer
discontinuity for a large ensemble of Herbig Ae/Be stars, and imply typically
small mass accretion rates, < 10^{-7} Msun/yr. In order for accretion to
proceed onto the star, significant amounts of gas must exist inside the dust
destruction radius, which is potentially problematic for recently advocated
scenarios of "puffed" inner dust wall geometries. However, our models of the
inner gas disk show that for the typical accretion rates we have derived, the
gas should be generally optically thin, thus allowing direct stellar
irradiation of the inner dust edge of the disk.Comment: 32 pages, 12 figures, accepted by Ap
A Photometric Catalogue of Southern Emission-Line Stars
We present a catalogue of previously unpublished optical and infrared
photometry for a sample of 162 emission-line objects and shell stars visible
from the southern hemisphere. The data were obtained between 1978 and 1997 in
the Walraven (WULBV), Johnson/Cousins (UBV(RI)_c) and ESO and SAAO
near-infrared (JHKLM) photometric systems. Most of the observed objects are
Herbig Ae/Be (HAeBe) stars or HAeBe candidates appearing in the list of HAeBe
candidates of Th\'e et al. (1994), although several B[e] stars, LBVs and T
Tauri are also included in our sample. For many of the stars the data presented
here are the first photo-electric measurements in the literature. The resulting
catalogue consists of 1809 photometric measurements. Optical variability was
detected in 66 out of the 116 sources that were observed more than once. 15 out
of the 50 stars observed multiple times in the infrared showed variability at
2.2 microns (K band).Comment: 42 pages, no figures, to appear in Astronomy & Astrophysic
Optical photometry of GM Cep: evidence for UXor type of variability
Results from optical photometric observations of the pre-main sequence star
GM Cep are reported in the paper. The star is located in the field of the young
open cluster Trumpler 37 - a region of active star formation. GM Cep shows a
large amplitude rapid variability interpreted as a possible outburst from EXor
type in previous studies. Our data from BVRI CCD photometric observations of
the star are collected from June 2008 to February 2011 in Rozhen observatory
(Bulgaria) and Skinakas observatory (Crete, Greece). A sequence of sixteen
comparison stars in the field of GM Cep was calibrated in the BVRI bands. Our
photometric data for a 2.5 years period show a high amplitude variations (Delta
V ~ 2.3m) and two deep minimums in brightness are observed. The analysis of
collected multicolor photometric data shows the typical of UX Ori variables a
color reversal during the minimums in brightness. On the other hand, high
amplitude rapid variations in brightness typical for the Classical T Tauri
stars also present on the light curve of GM Cep. Comparing our results with
results published in the literature, we conclude that changes in brightness are
caused by superposition of both: (1) magnetically channeled accretion from the
circumstellar disk, and (2) occultation from circumstellar clouds of dust or
from features of a circumstellar disk.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Ap&S
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