29 research outputs found
Characterising the magnetic fields of the Herbig Ae/Be stars HD97048, HD150193, HD176386, and MWC480
Our knowledge of the presence and the role of magnetic fields in
intermediate-mass pre-main-sequence stars remains very poor.
We present the magnetic properties of four Herbig Ae/Be stars that have not
been previously studied in detail.
Our results for the three Herbig Ae/Be stars HD97048, HD150193, and HD176386
are based on multi-epoch low-resolution spectra obtained in spectropolarimetric
mode with FORS2 mounted on the VLT. New high-resolution polarimetric spectra
were obtained for MWC480 with the SOFIN spectrograph installed at the Nordic
Optical Telescope. We discuss 41 FORS2 low-resolution observations of the
Herbig Ae/Be stars HD97048, HD150193, and HD176386 and determine their
rotational periods. Using stellar fundamental parameters and the longitudinal
magnetic field phase curves, we place constraints on the magnetic field
geometry. Three high-resolution circularly polarised SOFIN spectra obtained for
MWC480 were measured using the moment technique where wavelength shifts between
right- and left-hand side circularly polarised spectra are interpreted in terms
of a longitudinal magnetic field .
Our search for periodicities resulted in P=0.693d for HD97048, P=1.317d for
HD150193, and P=0.899d for HD176386. The magnetic field geometry can likely be
described by a centred dipole with a polar magnetic field strength B_d of
several hundred Gauss. The longitudinal magnetic-field measurements of MWC480
reveal the presence of a strong kG field, which was undetected in our previous
low-resolution polarimetric observations with FORS1. A weak magnetic field was
detected in the circumstellar components of the Ca II H&K lines and the Na I D
lines, indicating a complex interaction between the stellar magnetic field and
the circumstellar environment.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures, 5 tables, accepted for publication in A&
The unusual protoplanetary disk around the T Tauri star ET Cha
We present new continuum and line observations, along with modelling, of the
faint (6-8) Myr old T Tauri star ET Cha belonging to the eta Chamaeleontis
cluster. We have acquired HERSCHEL/PACS photometric fluxes at 70 mic and 160
mic, as well as a detection of the [OI] 63 mic fine-structure line in emission,
and derived upper limits for some other far-IR OI, CII, CO and o-H2O lines. The
HERSCHEL data is complemented by new ANDICAM B-K photometry, new HST/COS and
HST/STIS UV-observations, a non-detection of CO J=3-2 with APEX, re-analysis of
a UCLES high-resolution optical spectrum showing forbidden emission lines like
[OI] 6300A, [SII] 6731A and 6716A, and [NII] 6583A, and a compilation of
existing broad-band photometric data. We used the thermo-chemical disk code
ProDiMo and the Monte-Carlo radiative transfer code MCFOST to model the
protoplanetary disk around ET Cha. Based on these models we can determine the
disk dust mass Mdust = (2.E-8 - 5.E-8) Msun, whereas the total disk gas mass is
found to be only little constrained, Mgas = (5.E-5 - 3.E-3) Msun. In the
models, the disk extends from 0.022 AU (just outside of the co-rotation radius)
to only about 10 AU. Larger disks are found to be inconsistent with the CO
J=3-2 non-detection. The low velocity component of the [OI] 6300A emission line
is consistent with being emitted from the inner disk. The model can also
reproduce the line flux of H2 v=1-0 S(1) at 2.122 mic. An additional
high-velocity component of the [OI] 6300A emission line, however, points to the
existence of an additional jet/outflow of low velocity (40 - 65) km/s with mass
loss rate ~1.E-9 Msun/yr. In relation to our low estimations of the disk mass,
such a mass loss rate suggests a disk lifetime of only ~(0.05 - 3) Myr,
substantially shorter than the cluster age. The evolutionary state of this
unusual protoplanetary disk is discussed.Comment: accepted by Astronomy & Astrophysics (18 pages, 11 figures and 7
tables). Additional 9-page appendix with 6 figures, 3 tables and 37 equation
GASPS observations of Herbig Ae/Be stars with PACS/Herschel. The atomic and molecular content of their protoplanetary discs
We observed a sample of 20 representative Herbig Ae/Be stars and five A-type
debris discs with PACS onboard of Herschel. The observations were done in
spectroscopic mode, and cover far-IR lines of [OI], [CII], CO, CH+, H2O and OH.
We have a [OI]63 micron detection rate of 100% for the Herbig Ae/Be and 0% for
the debris discs. [OI]145 micron is only detected in 25%, CO J=18-17 in 45%
(and less for higher J transitions) of the Herbig Ae/Be stars and for [CII] 157
micron, we often found spatially variable background contamination. We show the
first detection of water in a Herbig Ae disc, HD 163296, which has a settled
disc. Hydroxyl is detected as well in this disc. CH+, first seen in HD 100546,
is now detected for the second time in a Herbig Ae star, HD 97048. We report
fluxes for each line and use the observations as line diagnostics of the gas
properties. Furthermore, we look for correlations between the strength of the
emission lines and stellar or disc parameters, such as stellar luminosity, UV
and X-ray flux, accretion rate, PAH band strength, and flaring. We find that
the stellar UV flux is the dominant excitation mechanism of [OI]63 micron, with
the highest line fluxes found in those objects with a large amount of flaring
and greatest PAH strength. Neither the amount of accretion nor the X-ray
luminosity has an influence on the line strength. We find correlations between
the line flux of [OI]63 micron and [OI]145 micron, CO J = 18-17 and [OI]6300
\AA, and between the continuum flux at 63 micron and at 1.3 mm, while we find
weak correlations between the line flux of [OI]63 micron and the PAH
luminosity, the line flux of CO J = 3-2, the continuum flux at 63 micron, the
stellar effective temperature and the Brgamma luminosity. (Abbreviated version)Comment: 20 pages, 29 figures, accepted by Astronomy and Astrophysic
Observational diagnostics of gas in protoplanetary disks
Protoplanetary disks are composed primarily of gas (99% of the mass).
Nevertheless, relatively few observational constraints exist for the gas in
disks. In this review, I discuss several observational diagnostics in the UV,
optical, near-IR, mid-IR, and (sub)-mm wavelengths that have been employed to
study the gas in the disks of young stellar objects. I concentrate in
diagnostics that probe the inner 20 AU of the disk, the region where planets
are expected to form. I discuss the potential and limitations of each gas
tracer and present prospects for future research.Comment: Review written for the proceedings of the conference "Origin and
Evolution of Planets 2008", Ascona, Switzerland, June 29 - July 4, 2008. Date
manuscript: October 2008. 17 Pages, 6 graphics, 134 reference
Accretion-related properties of Herbig Ae/Be stars. Comparison with T Tauris
We look for trends relating the mass accretion rate (Macc) and the stellar
ages (t), spectral energy distributions (SEDs), and disk masses (Mdisk) for a
sample of 38 HAeBe stars, comparing them to analogous correlations found for
classical T Tauri stars. Our goal is to shed light on the timescale and
physical processes that drive evolution of intermediate-mass pre-main sequence
objects.
Macc shows a dissipation timescale \tau = 1.3^{+1.0}_{-0.5} Myr from an
exponential law fit, while a power law yields Macc(t) \propto t^{-\eta}, with
\eta = 1.8^{+1.4}_{-0.7}. This result is based on our whole HAeBe sample (1-6
Msun), but the accretion rate decline most probably depends on smaller stellar
mass bins. The near-IR excess is higher and starts at shorter wavelengths (J
and H bands) for the strongest accretors. Active and passive disks are roughly
divided by 2 x 10^{-7} Msun/yr. The mid-IR excess and the SED shape from the
Meeus et al. classification are not correlated with Macc. We find Macc \propto
Mdisk^{1.1 +- 0.3}. Most stars in our sample with signs of inner dust
dissipation typically show accretion rates ten times lower and disk masses
three times smaller than the remaining objects.
The trends relating Macc with the near-IR excess and Mdisk extend those for T
Tauri stars, and are consistent with viscous disk models. The differences in
the inner gas dissipation timescale, and the relative position of the stars
with signs of inner dust clearing in the Macc-Mdisk plane, could be suggesting
a slightly faster evolution, and that a different process - such as
photoevaporation - plays a more relevant role in dissipating disks in the HAeBe
regime compared to T Tauri stars. Our conclusions must consider the mismatch
between the disk mass estimates from mm fluxes and the disk mass estimates from
accretion, which we also find in HAeBe stars.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, 1 appendix. Accepted in A&
ALMA Reveals the Anatomy of the mm-sized Dust and Molecular Gas in the HD 97048 Disk
Transitional disks show a lack of excess emission at infrared wavelengths due to a large dust cavity, that is often corroborated by spatially resolved observations at ∼mm wavelengths. We present the first spatially resolved ∼ mm-wavelength images of the disk around the Herbig Ae/Be star, HD 97048. Scattered light images show that the disk extends to ≈640 au. ALMA data reveal a circular-symmetric dusty disk extending to ≈350 au, and a molecular disk traced in CO J = 3-2 emission, extending to ≈750 au. The CO emission arises from a flared layer with an opening angle ≈30°–40°. HD 97048 is another source for which the large (∼ mm-sized) dust grains are more centrally concentrated than the small (∼μm-sized) grains and molecular gas, likely due to radial drift. The images and visibility data modeling suggest a decrement in continuum emission within ≈50 au, consistent with the cavity size determined from mid-infrared imaging (34 ± 4 au). The extracted continuum intensity profiles show ring-like structures with peaks at ≈50, 150, and 300 au, with associated gaps at ≈100 and 250 au. This structure should be confirmed in higher-resolution images (FWHM ≈ 10–20 au). These data confirm the classification of HD 97048 as a transitional disk that also possesses multiple ring-like structures in the dust continuum emission. Additional data are required at multiple and well-separated frequencies to fully characterize the disk structure, and thereby constrain the mechanism(s) responsible for sculpting the HD 97048 disk
A 'Rosetta Stone' for protoplanetary disks:the synergy of multi-wavelength observations
The recent progress in instrumentation and telescope development has brought
us different ways to observe protoplanetary disks, including interferometers,
space missions, adaptive optics, polarimetry, and time- and spectrally-resolved
data. While the new facilities have changed the way we can tackle the existing
open problems in disk structure and evolution, there is a substantial lack of
interconnection between different observing techniques and their user
communities. Here, we explore the complementarity of some of the
state-of-the-art observing techniques, and how they can be brought together in
a collective effort to understand how disks evolve and disperse at the time of
planet formation.
This paper was born at the "Protoplanetary Discussions" meeting in Edinburgh,
2016. Its goal is to clarify where multi-wavelength observations of disks
converge in unveiling disk structure and evolution, and where they diverge and
challenge our current understanding. We discuss caveats that should be
considered when linking results from different observations, or when drawing
conclusions based on limited datasets (in terms of wavelength or sample). We
focus on disk properties that are currently being revolutionized by
multi-wavelength observations. Specifically: the inner disk radius, holes and
gaps and their link to large-scale disk structures, the disk mass, and the
accretion rate. We discuss how the links between them, as well as the apparent
contradictions, can help us to disentangle the disk physics and to learn about
disk evolution.Comment: Accepted for publication in PASA. 37 pages, 9 figures, 1 table.
Revised version: corrected problem in Fig
Detection of CH <sup>+</sup> emission from the disc around HD 100546
Despite its importance in the thermal-balance of the gas and in the
determination of primeval planetary atmospheres, the chemistry in
protoplanetary discs remains poorly constrained with only a handful of detected
species. We observed the emission from disc around the Herbig Be star HD 100546
with the PACS instrument in the spectroscopic mode on board the Herschel Space
Telescope as part of the Gas in Protoplanetary Systems (GASPS) programme and
used archival data from the DIGIT programme to search for the rotational
emission of CH+. We detected in both datasets an emission line centred at 72.16
micron that most likely corresponds to the J=5-4 rotational emission of CH+.
The J=3-2 and 6-5 transitions are also detected albeit with lower confidence.
Other CH+ rotational lines in the PACS observations are blended with water
lines. A rotational diagram analysis shows that the CH+ gas is warm at 323
(+2320/-151) K with a mass of 3e-14-5e-12 M_Sun. We modelled the CH+ chemistry
with the chemo-physical code ProDiMo using a disc density structure and grain
parameters that match continuum observations and near- and mid-infrared
interferometric data. The model suggests that CH+ is most abundant at the
location of the disc rim at 10-13 AU from the star where the gas is warm,
consistent with previous observations of hot CO gas emission.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, A & A letter, accepted, version after language
editio
Constraining the structure of the transition disk HD 135344B (SAO 206462) by simultaneous modeling of multiwavelength gas and dust observations
Context. Constraining the gas and dust disk structure of transition disks, particularly in the inner dust cavity, is a crucial step toward understanding the link between them and planet formation. HD 135344B is an accreting (pre-)transition disk that displays the CO 4.7 μm emission extending tens of AU inside its 30 AU dust cavity. Aims. We constrain HD 135344B's disk structure from multi-instrument gas and dust observations. Methods. We used the dust radiative transfer code MCFOST and the thermochemical code ProDiMo to derive the disk structure from the simultaneous modeling of the spectral energy distribution (SED), VLT/CRIRES CO P(10) 4.75 μm, Herschel/PACS [OI] 63 μm, Spitzer/IRS, and JCMT 12CO J = 3-2 spectra, VLTI/PIONIER H-band visibilities, and constraints from (sub-)mm continuum interferometry and near-IR imaging. Results. We found a disk model able to describe the current gas and dust observations simultaneously. </p