129 research outputs found
The Structure and Evolution of Protoplanetary Disks: an infrared and submillimeter view
Circumstellar disks are the sites of planet formation, and the very high
incidence of extrasolar planets implies that most of them actually form
planetary systems. Studying the structure and evolution of protoplanetary disks
can thus place important constraints on the conditions, timescales, and
mechanisms associated with the planet formation process. In this review, we
discuss observational results from infrared and submillimeter wavelength
studies. We review disk lifetimes, transition objects, disk demographics, and
highlight a few remarkable results from ALMA Early Science observations. We
finish with a brief discussion of ALMA's potential to transform the field in
near future.Comment: Invited Review. 7 Pages. To appear in "Young Stars and Planets Near
the Sun", Proceedings of IAU Symposium No. 314 (Cambridge University Press),
J.H. Kastner, B. Stelzer, S.A. Metchev, ed
Testing the Disk Regulation Paradigm with Spitzer Observations. II. A Clear Signature of Star-Disk Interaction in NGC 2264 and the Orion Nebula Cluster
Observations of PMS star rotation periods reveal slow rotators in young
clusters of various ages, indicating that angular momentum is somehow removed
from these rotating masses. The mechanism by which spin-up is regulated as
young stars contract has been one of the longest-standing problems in star
formation. Attempts to observationally confirm the prevailing theory that
magnetic interaction between the star and its circumstellar disk regulates
these rotation periods have produced mixed results. In this paper, we use the
unprecedented disk identification capability of the Spitzer Space Telescope to
test the star-disk interaction paradigm in two young clusters, NGC 2264 and the
Orion Nebula Cluster (ONC). We show that once mass effects and sensitivity
biases are removed, a clear increase in the disk fraction with period can be
observed in both clusters across the entire period range populated by cluster
members. We also show that the long-period peak (P 8 days) of the bimodal
distribution observed for high-mass stars in the ONC is dominated by a
population of stars possessing a disk, while the short-period peak (P 2
days) is dominated by a population of stars without a disk. Our results
represent the strongest evidence to date that star-disk interaction regulates
the angular momentum of these young stars. This study will make possible
quantitative comparisons between the observed period distributions of stars
with and without a disk and numerical models of the angular momentum evolution
of young stars.Comment: 31 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication in Ap
Protoplanetary Disks and Their Evolution
Flattened, rotating disks of cool dust and gas extending for tens to hundreds
of AU are found around almost all low mass stars shortly after their birth.
These disks generally persist for several Myr, during which time some material
accretes onto the star, some is lost through outflows and photoevaporation, and
some condenses into centimeter- and larger-sized bodies or planetesimals.
Through observations mainly at infrared through millimeter wavelengths, we can
determine how common disks are at different ages, measure basic properties
including mass, size, structure, and composition, and follow their varied
evolutionary pathways. In this way, we see the first steps toward exoplanet
formation and learn about the origins of the Solar System. This review
addresses observations of the outer parts, beyond 1 AU, of protoplanetary disks
with a focus on recent infrared and (sub-)millimeter results and an eye to the
promise of new facilities in the immediate future.Comment: 65 pages, 11 figures, published in volume 49 of the Annual Review of
Astronomy and Astrophysics, based on the available literature up to the end
of 2010. We recommend that you retrieve the published paper from Annual
Reviews for greatly improved figures and typesettin
The Masses of Transition Circumstellar Disks: Observational Support for Photoevaporation Models
We report deep Sub-Millimeter Array observations of 26 pre-main-sequence
(PMS) stars with evolved inner disks. These observations measure the mass of
the outer disk (r ~20-100 AU) across every stage of the dissipation of the
inner disk (r < 10 AU) as determined by the IR spectral energy distributions
(SEDs). We find that only targets with high mid-IR excesses are detected and
have disk masses in the 1-5 M_Jup range, while most of our objects remain
undetected to sensitivity levels of M_DISK ~0.2-1.5 M_Jup. To put these results
in a more general context, we collected publicly available data to construct
the optical to millimeter wavelength SEDs of over 120 additional PMS stars. We
find that the near-IR and mid-IR emission remain optically thick in objects
whose disk masses span 2 orders of magnitude (~0.5-50 M_Jup). Taken together,
these results imply that, in general, inner disks start to dissipate only after
the outer disk has been significantly depleted of mass. This provides strong
support for photoevaporation being one of the dominant processes driving disk
evolution.Comment: Accepted for publication by ApJL, 4 pages and 3 figure
Spitzer observations of the Hyades: Circumstellar debris disks at 625 Myr of age
We use the Spitzer Space Telescope to search for infrared excess at 24, 70,
and 160 micron due to debris disks around a sample of 45 FGK-type members of
the Hyades cluster. We supplement our observations with archival 24 and 70
micron Spitzer data of an additional 22 FGK-type and 11 A-type Hyades members
in order to provide robust statistics on the incidence of debris disks at 625
Myr of age an era corresponding to the late heavy bombardment in the Solar
System. We find that none of the 67 FGK-type stars in our sample show evidence
for a debris disk, while 2 out of the 11 A-type stars do so. This difference in
debris disk detection rate is likely to be due to a sensitivity bias in favor
of early-type stars. The fractional disk luminosity, L_dust/L*, of the disks
around the two A-type stars is ~4.0E-5, a level that is below the sensitivity
of our observations toward the FGK-type stars. However, our sensitivity limits
for FGK-type stars are able to exclude, at the 2-sigma level, frequencies
higher than 12% and 5% of disks with L_dust/L* > 1.0E-4 and L_dust/L* > 5.0E-4,
respectively. We also use our sensitivity limits and debris disk models to
constrain the maximum mass of dust, as a function of distance from the stars,
that could remain undetected around our targets.Comment: 33 pages, 11 figures, accepted by Ap
The Nature of Transition Circumstellar Disks II. Southern Molecular Clouds
Transition disk objects are pre-main-sequence stars with little or no near-IR
excess and significant far-IR excess, implying inner opacity holes in their
disks. Here we present a multifrequency study of transition disk candidates
located in Lupus I, III, IV, V, VI, Corona Australis, and Scorpius.
Complementing the information provided by Spitzer with adaptive optics (AO)
imaging (NaCo, VLT), submillimeter photometry (APEX), and echelle spectroscopy
(Magellan, Du Pont Telescopes), we estimate the multiplicity, disk mass, and
accretion rate for each object in our sample in order to identify the mechanism
potentially responsible for its inner hole. We find that our transition disks
show a rich diversity in their spectral energy distribution morphology, have
disk masses ranging from lsim1 to 10 M JUP, and accretion rates ranging from
lsim10-11 to 10-7.7 M \odot yr-1. Of the 17 bona fide transition disks in our
sample, three, nine, three, and two objects are consistent with giant planet
formation, grain growth, photoevaporation, and debris disks, respectively. Two
disks could be circumbinary, which offers tidal truncation as an alternative
origin of the inner hole. We find the same heterogeneity of the transition disk
population in Lupus III, IV, and Corona Australis as in our previous analysis
of transition disks in Ophiuchus while all transition disk candidates selected
in Lupus V, VI turned out to be contaminating background asymptotic giant
branch stars. All transition disks classified as photoevaporating disks have
small disk masses, which indicates that photoevaporation must be less efficient
than predicted by most recent models. The three systems that are excellent
candidates for harboring giant planets potentially represent invaluable
laboratories to study planet formation with the Atacama Large
Millimeter/Submillimeter Array.Comment: 62 pages, 13 figure
Evidence for J and H-band excess in classical T Tauri stars and the implications for disk structure and estimated ages
We argue that classical T Tauri stars (cTTs) possess significant non-
photospheric excess in the J and H bands. We first show that normalizing the
spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of cTTs to the J-band leads to a poor fit
of the optical fluxes, while normalizing the SEDs to the Ic-band produces a
better fit to the optical bands and in many cases reveals the presence of a
considerable excess at J and H. NIR spectroscopic veiling measurements from the
literature support this result. We find that J and H-band excesses correlate
well with the K-band excess, and that the J-K and H-K colors of the excess
emission are consistent with that of a black body at the dust sublimation
temperature (~ 1500-2000 K). We propose that this near-IR excess originates at
a hot inner rim, analogous to those suggested to explain the near-IR bump in
the SEDs of Herbig Ae/Be stars. To test our hypothesis, we use the model
presented by Dullemond et al. (2001) to fit the photometry data between 0.5 um
and 24 um of 10 cTTs associated with the Chamaeleon II molecular cloud. The
models that best fit the data are those where the inner radius of the disk is
larger than expected for a rim in thermal equilibrium with the photospheric
radiation field alone. In particular, we find that large inner rims are
necessary to account for the mid infrared fluxes (3.6-8.0 um) obtained by the
Spitzer Space Telescope. Finally, we argue that deriving the stellar
luminosities of cTTs by making bolometric corrections to the J-band fluxes
systematically overestimates these luminosities. The overestimated luminosities
translate into underestimated ages when the stars are placed in the H-R
diagram. Thus, the results presented herein have important implications for the
dissipation timescale of inner accretion disks.Comment: 45 pages, 13 figure
Infrared and Radio observations of a small group of protostellar objects in the molecular core, L1251-C
We present a multi-wavelength observational study of a low-mass star-forming
region, L1251-C, with observational results at wavelengths from the
near-infrared to the millimeter. Spitzer Space Telescope observations confirmed
that IRAS 22343+7501 is a small group of protostellar objects. The extended
emission to east-west direction with its intensity peak at the center of L1251A
has been detected at 350 and 850 micron with the CSO and JCMT telescopes,
tracing dense envelope materials around L1251A. The single-dish data from the
KVN and TRAO telescopes show inconsistencies between the intensity peaks of
several molecular line emission and that of the continuum emission, suggesting
complex distributions of molecular abundances around L1251A. The SMA
interferometer data, however, show intensity peaks of CO 2-1 and 13CO 2-1
located at the position of IRS 1, which is both the brightest source in IRAC
image and the weakest source in the 1.3 mm dust continuum map. IRS 1 is the
strongest candidate for the driving source of the newly detected compact CO 2-1
outflow. Over the whole region (14' by 14') of L125l-C, 3 Class I and 16 Class
II sources have been detected, including three YSOs in L1251A. A comparison
with the average projected distance among 19 YSOs in L1251-C and that among 3
YSOs in L1251A suggests L1251-C is an example of low-mass cluster formation,
where protostellar objects are forming in a small group.Comment: 53 pages, 19 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
Herschel Observations of the T Cha Transition Disk: Constraining the Outer Disk Properties
T Cha is a nearby (d similar to 100 pc) transition disk known to have an optically thin gap separating optically thick inner and outer disk components. Huelamo et al. recently reported the presence of a low-mass object candidate within the gap of the T Cha disk, giving credence to the suspected planetary origin of this gap. Here we present the Herschel photometry (70, 160, 250, 350, and 500 mu m) of T Cha from the "Dust, Ice, and Gas in Time" Key Program, which bridges the wavelength range between existing Spitzer and millimeter data and provide important constraints on the outer disk properties of this extraordinary system. We model the entire optical to millimeter wavelength spectral energy distribution (SED) of T Cha (19 data points between 0.36 and 3300 mu m without any major gaps in wavelength coverage). T Cha shows a steep spectral slope in the far-IR, which we find clearly favors models with outer disks containing little or no dust beyond similar to 40 AU. The full SED can be modeled equally well with either an outer disk that is very compact (only a few AU wide) or a much larger one that has a very steep surface density profile. That is, T Cha's outer disk seems to be either very small or very tenuous. Both scenarios suggest a highly unusual outer disk and have important but different implications for the nature of T Cha. Spatially resolved images are needed to distinguish between the two scenarios.DIGIT Herschel Open Time Key ProgramNASAAlexander von Humboldt FoundationEuropean CommissionAgence Nationale pour la Recherche of France PERG06-GA-2009-256513, ANR-07-BLAN-0221, ANR-2010-JCJC-0504-01CNRS/INSU, FranceAstronom
- …
