162 research outputs found
NGC 2362: a Template for Early Stellar Evolution
We present UBVRI photometry for the young open cluster NGC 2362. From
analysis of the appropriate color-color and color-magnitude diagrams we derive
the fundamental parameters of the NGC 2362 cluster to be: age = 5 (+1-2) Myr,
distance = 1480 pc, E(B-V)=0.10 mag. The cluster age was independently
determined for both high mass (2.1 - 36Msun) and low mass (0.7 - 1.2Msun) stars
with excellent agreement between the ages derived using post-main sequence and
pre-main sequence evolutionary tracks for the high and low mass stars
respectively. Analysis of this cluster's color-magnitude diagram reveals a well
defined pre-main sequence (covering DeltaV ~ 9 magnitudes in V and extending
from early A stars to near the hydrogen burning limit) which makes this cluster
an ideal laboratory for pre-main sequence evolution studies.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, to be published in ApJ
A proto brown dwarf candidate in Taurus
Aims. We search for brown dwarfs at the Class 0/I evolutionary stage, or proto brown dwarfs.
Methods. We present a multi wavelength study, ranging from optical at 0.8 ÎŒm to radio wavelengths at 6 cm, of a cool, very faint, and red multiple object, SSTB213 J041757, detected by Spitzer toward the Barnard 213 dark cloud, in Taurus.
Results. The SED of SSTB213 J041757 displays a clear excess at long wavelengths resembling that of a Class I object. The mid-IR source has two possible counterparts, A and B, in the near-IR and optical images, and the 350 ÎŒm observations detect clear extended emission, presumably from an envelope around the two sources. The position of A & B in the (Icâ J) versus (J â [3.6]) colour-colour diagram is consistent with them being Galactic sources and not extragalactic contaminants. A proper-motion study confirms this result for A, while it is inconclusive for B. The temperature and mass of the two possible central objects, according to COND evolutionary models, range between 1550â1750 K and 3â4 M_(Jupiter), and 950â1300 K and 1â2 M_(Jupiter), for A and B, respectively. The integrated SED provides bolometric temperatures and luminosities of 280 K and 0.0034 L_â, assuming that the emission at wavelengths > 5 ÎŒm is associated with component A, and 150 K and 0.0033 L_â, assuming that the emission at wavelengths > 5 ÎŒm is associated with component B, which would imply the SSTB213 J041757 object has a luminosity well below the luminosity of other very low luminosity objects discovered up to date.
Conclusions. With these characteristics, SSTB213 J041757 seems to be a promising, and perhaps double, proto brown dwarf candidate
Testing the companion hypothesis for the origin of the X-ray emission from intermediate-mass main-sequence stars
There is no straightforward explanation for intrinsic X-ray emission from
intermediate-mass main-sequence stars. Therefore the observed emission is often
interpreted in terms of (hypothesized) late-type magnetically active companion
stars. We use Chandra imaging observations to spatially resolve in X-rays a
sample of main-sequence B-type stars with recently discovered companions at
arcsecond separation. We find that all spatially resolved companions are X-ray
emitters, but seven out of eleven intermediate-mass stars are also X-ray
sources. If this emission is interpreted in terms of additional sub-arcsecond
or spectroscopic companions, this implies a high multiplicity of B-type stars.
Firm results on B star multiplicity pending, the alternative, that B stars
produce intrinsic X-rays, can not be discarded. The appropriate scenario in
this vein is might be a magnetically confined wind, as suggested for the X-ray
emission of the magnetic Ap star IQ Aur. However, the only Ap star in the
Chandra sample is not detected in X-rays, and therefore does not support this
picture.Comment: 12 pages; accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic
A search for pre- and proto-brown dwarfs in the dark cloud Barnard 30 with ALMA
In this work we present ALMA continuum observations at 880 m of 30
sub-mm cores previously identified with APEX/LABOCA at 870m in the Barnard
30 cloud. The main goal is to characterize the youngest and lowest mass
population in the cloud. As a result, we report the detection of five (out of
30) spatially unresolved sources with ALMA, with estimated masses between 0.9
and 67 M. From these five sources, only two show gas emission. The
analysis of multi-wavelength photometry from these two objects, namely B30-LB14
and B30-LB19, is consistent with one Class II- and one Class I low-mass stellar
object, respectively. The gas emission is consistent with a rotating disk in
the case of B30-LB14, and with an oblate rotating envelope with infall
signatures in the case of LB19. The remaining three ALMA detections do not have
infrared counterparts and can be classified as either deeply embedded objects
or as starless cores if B30 members. In the former case, two of them (LB08 and
LB31) show internal luminosity upper limits consistent with Very Low Luminosity
objects, while we do not have enough information for LB10. In the starless core
scenario, and taking into account the estimated masses from ALMA and the
APEX/LABOCA cores, we estimate final masses for the central objects in the
substellar domain, so they could be classified as pre-BD core candidates.Comment: Published in A&
First detection of thermal radio jets in a sample of proto-brown dwarf candidates
We observed with the JVLA at 3.6 and 1.3 cm a sample of 11 proto-brown dwarf
candidates in Taurus in a search for thermal radio jets driven by the most
embedded brown dwarfs. We detected for the first time four thermal radio jets
in proto-brown dwarf candidates. We compiled data from UKIDSS, 2MASS, Spitzer,
WISE and Herschel to build the Spectral Energy Distribution (SED) of the
objects in our sample, which are similar to typical Class~I SEDs of Young
Stellar Objects (YSOs). The four proto-brown dwarf candidates driving thermal
radio jets also roughly follow the well-known trend of centimeter luminosity
against bolometric luminosity determined for YSOs, assuming they belong to
Taurus, although they present some excess of radio emission compared to the
known relation for YSOs. Nonetheless, we are able to reproduce the flux
densities of the radio jets modeling the centimeter emission of the thermal
radio jets using the same type of models applied to YSOs, but with
corresponding smaller stellar wind velocities and mass-loss rates, and
exploring different possible geometries of the wind or outflow from the star.
Moreover, we also find that the modeled mass outflow rates for the bolometric
luminosities of our objects agree reasonably well with the trends found between
the mass outflow rates and bolometric luminosities of YSOs, which indicates
that, despite the "excess" centimeter emission, the intrinsic properties of
proto-brown dwarfs are consistent with a continuation of those of very low mass
stars to a lower mass range. Overall, our study favors the formation of brown
dwarfs as a scaled-down version of low-mass stars.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures, 14 tables, accepted by the Astrophysical Journa
Ultraviolet emission lines of T Tauri stars
We present a study of the UV emission lines fluxes of the T Tauri stars (TTS). We have used for this purpose the final IUE sample of TTS which includes 33 TTS with good spectra in whole IUE range. We have derived the lines fluxes and compared them with the X-rays fluxes measured by the EINSTEIN satellite. Flux-flux diagrams are shown confirming that the X-rays flux of the TTSs is significantly lower than the expected if their atmospheres were similar to those of late-type main sequence stars. We have also found a weak correlation between the MgII and CIV lines fluxes suggesting that there is connection between the mechanism for line formation
A companion candidate in the gap of the T Cha transitional disk
T Cha is a young star surrounded by a cold disk. The presence of a gap within
its disk, inferred from fitting to the spectral energy distribution, has
suggested on-going planetary formation. We observed T Cha in L' and K_s with
NAOS-CONICA, the adaptive optics system at the VLT, using sparse aperture
masking. We detected a source in the L' data at a separation of 62+-7 mas,
position angle of 78+-1 degrees, and a contrast of delta L' = 5.1+-0.2 mag. The
object is not detected in the Ks band data, which show a 3-sigma contrast limit
of 5.2 mag at the position of the detected L' source. For a distance of 108 pc,
the detected companion candidate is located at 6.7 AU from the primary, well
within the disk gap. If T Cha and the companion candidate are bound, the
comparison of the L' and Ks photometry with evolutionary tracks shows that the
photometry is inconsistent with any unextincted photosphere at the age and
distance of T Cha. The detected object shows a very red Ks-L' color for which a
possible explanation would be a significant amount of dust around it. This
would imply that the companion candidate is young, which would strengthen the
case for a physical companion, and moreover that the object would be in the
substellar regime, according to the Ks upper limit. Another exciting
possibility would be that this companion is a recently formed planet within the
disk. Additional observations are mandatory to confirm that the object is bound
and to properly characterize it.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures; accepted for publication by A&
Discovery of a jet from the single HAe/Be star HD 100546
Young accreting stars drive outflows that collimate into jets, which can be seen hundreds of au from their driving sources. Accretion and outflow activity cease with system age, and it is believed that magneto-centrifugally launched disk winds are critical agents in regulating accretion through the protoplanetary disk. Protostellar jets are well studied in classical T Tauri stars (MâââČâ2âMâ), while few nearby (dââČâ150âpc) intermediate-mass stars (Mââ=â2â10âMâ), known as Herbig Ae/Be stars, have detected jets. We report VLT/MUSE observations of the Herbig Ae/Be star HD 100546 and the discovery of a protostellar jet. The jet is similar in appearance to jets driven by low-mass stars and compares well with the jet of HD 163296, the only other known optical jet from a nearby Herbig Ae/Be star. We derive a (one-sided) mass-loss rate in the jet of log áčjet ⌠â9.5 (in Mâ yrâ1) and a ratio of outflow to accretion of roughly 3â
Ăâ
10â3, which is lower than that of CTTS jets. The discovery of the HD 100546 jet is particularly interesting because the protoplanetary disk around HD 100546 shows a large radial gap, spiral structure, and might host a protoplanetary system. A bar-like structure previously seen in Hα with VLT/SPHERE shares the jet position angle, likely represents the base of the jet, and suggests a jet-launching region within about 2 au. We conclude that the evolution of the disk at radii beyond a few au does not affect the ability of the system to launch jets
Multi-Conjugate Adaptive Optics images of the Trapezium Cluster
Multi-Conjugate Adaptive Optics (MCAO) combines the advantages of standard
adaptive optics, which provides high contrast and high spatial resolution, and
of wide field ~1' imaging. Up to recently, MCAO for astronomy was limited to
laboratory experiments. In this paper, we present the first scientific results
obtained with the first MCAO instrument put on the sky. We present a new study
of the Trapezium cluster using deep MCAO images with a field of view of 1'x1'
obtained at the VLT. We have used deep J, H and Ks images recently obtained
with the prototype MCAO facility MAD at the VLT in order to search for new
members and new multiple systems in the Trapezium cluster. On bright targets
(Ks~9mag), these images allow us to reach DeltaKs~6mag as close as 0.4" We
report the detection of 128 sources, including 10 new faint objects in the
magnitude range between 16.1<Ks<17.9mag. In addition to all previously known
multiple systems with separations greater than 0.1", we confirm the
multiplicity of TCC-055. We also report the detection in J, H and Ks of a very
red extended embedded protostellar object, HC419, previously detected in the
thermal infrared only. The analysis of the first MCAO images obtained on the
sky demonstrates not only the technical feasibility of MCAO but also its great
potential and versatility in terms of scientific outputs.Comment: High resolution version available on
http://arrakeen.free.fr/pub/madorion.pdf Accepted 25 Sep. 2007 for
publication in A&A, 14 pages, 11 figure
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