35 research outputs found
High-Resolution Near Infrared Spectroscopy of HD 100546: II. Analysis of variable rovibrational CO emission lines
We present observations of rovibrational CO in HD 100546 from four epochs
spanning January 2003 through December 2010. We show that the equivalent widths
of the CO lines vary during this time period with the v=1-0 CO lines
brightening more than the UV fluoresced lines from the higher vibrational
states. While the spectroastrometric signal of the hot band lines remains
constant during this period, the spectroastrometric signal of the v=1--0 lines
varies substantially. At all epochs, the spectroastrometric signals of the UV
fluoresced lines are consistent with the signal one would expect from gas in an
axisymmetric disk. In 2003, the spectroastrometric signal of the v=1-0 P26 line
was symmetric and consistent with emission from an axisymmetric disk. However,
in 2006, there was no spatial offset of the signal detected on the red side of
the profile, and in 2010, the spectroastrometric offset was yet more strongly
reduced toward zero velocity. A model is presented that can explain the
evolution of the equivalent width of the v=1-0 P26 line and its
spectroastrometric signal by adding to the system a compact source of CO
emission that orbits the star near the inner edge of the disk. We hypothesize
that such emission may arise from a circumplanetary disk orbiting a gas giant
planet near the inner edge of the circumstellar disk. We discuss how this idea
can be tested observationally and be distinguished from an alternative
interpretation of random fluctuations in the disk emission.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figure
High-Resolution Near Infrared Spectroscopy of HD 100546: I. Analysis of Asymmetric Ro-Vibrational OH Emission Lines
We present observations of ro-vibrational OH and CO emission from the Herbig
Be star HD 100546. The emission from both molecules arises from the inner
region of the disk extending from approximately 13 AU from the central star.
The velocity profiles of the OH lines are narrower than the velocity profile of
the [O I] 6300 Angstrom line indicating that the OH in the disk is not
cospatial with the O I. This suggests that the inner optically thin region of
the disk is largely devoid of molecular gas. Unlike the ro-vibrational CO
emission lines, the OH lines are highly asymmetric. We show that the average CO
and average OH line profiles can be fit with a model of a disk comprised of an
eccentric inner wall and a circular outer disk. In this model, the vast
majority of the OH flux (75%) originates from the inner wall, while the vast
majority of the CO flux (65%) originates on the surface of the disk at radii
greater than 13 AU. Eccentric inner disks are predicted by hydrodynamic
simulations of circumstellar disks containing an embedded giant planet. We
discuss the implications of such a disk geometry in light of models of planet
disk tidal interactions and propose alternate explanations for the origin of
the asymmetry
The Radial Velocity Distribution of Class I and Flat-Spectrum Protostars
We analyze radial velocities for a sample of 31 Class I and flat spectrum
protostars in Taurus-Auriga, rho Ophiuchi and Serpens for evidence of the
global dynamical state of extremely young stellar populations buried within
parental molecular clouds. Comparing the radial velocity of each protostar to
that of the local CO gas, we are able to constrain the one dimensional radial
velocity dispersion of Class I and flat spectrum objects to ~ 2.5 km/sec or
below. This upper limit to the protostellar velocity dispersion is consistent
with the velocity dispersions of surrounding CO gas which we measure to be ~
1.4 km/sec, suggesting that the motions of protostars and local CO gas are
dynamically linked and dominated by the gravitational potential of the
molecular cloud. However, the upper limit on the protostellar velocity
dispersion could still allow for slightly inflated motions of protostars
relative to the local molecular gas. Four of the protostars analyzed appear to
have velocities more than 3 sigma (7.5 km/sec) away from the central local CO
gas velocity while showing spectroscopic indicators of youth and accretion such
as H_2 emission, HI Br Gamma emission, or K band continuum veiling. These
radial velocity outliers may represent protostellar spectroscopic binaries or
ejected cluster members.Comment: 9 pages in emulate ApJ format, accepted for publication in A
High Resolution Spectroscopy during Eclipse of the Young Substellar Eclipsing Binary 2MASS 0535-0546. I. Primary Spectrum: Cool Spots versus Opacity Uncertainties
We present high-resolution Keck optical spectra of the very young substellar
eclipsing binary 2MASS J05352184-0546085, obtained during eclipse of the
lower-mass (secondary) brown dwarf. The observations yield the spectrum of the
higher-mass (primary) brown dwarf alone, with negligible (~1.6%) contamination
by the secondary. We perform a simultaneous fine-analysis of the TiO-epsilon
band and the red lobe of the KI doublet, using state-of-the-art PHOENIX Dusty
and Cond synthetic spectra. Comparing the effective temperature and surface
gravity derived from these fits to the {\it empirically} determined surface
gravity of the primary (logg=3.5) then allows us to test the model spectra as
well as probe the prevailing photospheric conditions. We find that: (1) fits to
TiO-epsilon alone imply Teff=2500 \pm 50K; (2) at this Teff, fits to KI imply
logg=3.0, 0.5 dex lower than the true value; and (3) at the true logg, KI fits
yield Teff=2650 \pm 50K, ~150K higher than from TiO-epsilon alone. On the one
hand, these are the trends expected in the presence of cool spots covering a
large fraction of the primary's surface (as theorized previously to explain the
observed Teff reversal between the primary and secondary). Specifically, our
results can be reproduced by an unspotted stellar photosphere with Teff=2700K
and (empirical) logg=3.5, coupled with axisymmetric cool spots that are 15%
cooler (2300K), have an effective logg=3.0 (0.5 dex lower than photospheric),
and cover 70% of the surface. On the other hand, the trends in our analysis can
also be reproduced by model opacity errors: there are lacks in the synthetic
TiO-epsilon opacities, at least for higher-gravity field dwarfs. Stringently
discriminating between the two possibilities requires combining the present
results with an equivalent analysis of the secondary (predicted to be
relatively unspotted compared to the primary).Comment: To appear in ApJ. 11 pages, 5 figure
High Resolution K-band Spectroscopy of MWC 480 and V1331 Cyg
We present high resolution (R=25,000-35,000) K-band spectroscopy of two young
stars, MWC 480 and V1331 Cyg. Earlier spectrally dispersed (R=230)
interferometric observations of MWC 480 indicated the presence of an excess
continuum emission interior to the dust sublimation radius, with a spectral
shape that was interpreted as evidence for hot water emission from the inner
disk of MWC 480. Our spectrum of V1331 Cyg reveals strong emission from CO and
hot water vapor, likely arising in a circumstellar disk. In comparison, our
spectrum of MWC 480 appears mostly featureless. We discuss possible ways in
which strong water emission from MWC 480 might go undetected in our data. If
strong water emission is in fact absent from the inner disk, as our data
suggest, the continuum excess interior to the dust sublimation radius that is
detected in the interferometric data must have another origin. We discuss
possible physical origins for the continuum excess.Comment: 29 pages, 5 figures, to appear in Ap