162 research outputs found
VLT/SPHERE deep insight of NGC 3603's core: Segregation or confusion?
We present new near-infrared photometric measurements of the core of the
young massive cluster NGC 3603 obtained with extreme adaptive optics. The data
were obtained with the SPHERE instrument mounted on ESO Very Large Telescope,
and cover three fields in the core of this cluster. We applied a correction for
the effect of extinction to our data obtained in the J and K broadband filters
and estimated the mass of detected sources inside the field of view of
SPHERE/IRDIS, which is 13.5"x13.5". We derived the mass function (MF) slope for
each spectral band and field. The MF slope in the core is unusual compared to
previous results based on Hubble space telescope (HST) and very large telescope
(VLT) observations. The average slope in the core is estimated as
-1.06^{+0.26}_{-0.26} for the main sequence stars with 3.5 Msun < M < 120
Msun.Thanks to the SPHERE extreme adaptive optics, 814 low-mass stars were
detected to estimate the MF slope for the pre-main sequence stars with 0.6
Msun< M < 3.5 Msun , Gamma = -0.54^{+0.11}_{-0.11} in the K-band images in two
fields in the core of the cluster. For the first time, we derive the mass
function of the very core of the NGC 3603 young cluster for masses in the range
0.6 - 120 Msun. Previous studies were either limited by crowding, lack of
dynamic range, or a combination of both
Kinematic Analysis of a Protostellar Multiple System: Measuring the Protostar Masses and Assessing Gravitational Instability in the Disks of L1448 IRS3B and L1448 IRS3A
We present new Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA)
observations towards a compact (230~au separation) triple protostar system,
L1448 IRS3B, at 879~\micron with \contbeam~resolution. Spiral arm structure
within the circum-multiple disk is well resolved in dust continuum toward
IRS3B, and we detect the known wide (2300~au) companion, IRS3A, also resolving
possible spiral substructure. Using dense gas tracers, C17O, H13CO, and
H13CN, we resolve the Keplerian rotation for both the circum-triple disk in
IRS3B and the disk around IRS3A. Furthermore, we use the molecular line
kinematic data and radiative transfer modeling of the molecular line emission
to confirm that the disks are in Keplerian rotation with fitted masses of
for IRS3B-ab, ~Msun for IRS3A, and
place an upper limit on the central protostar mass for the tertiary IRS3B-c of
0.2~Msun. We measure the mass of the fragmenting disk of IRS3B to be 0.29~Msun
from the dust continuum emission of the circum-multiple disk and estimate the
mass of the clump surrounding IRS3B-c to be 0.07~Msun. We also find that the
disk around IRS3A has a mass of 0.04~Msun. By analyzing the Toomre~Q parameter,
we find the IRS3A circumstellar disk is gravitationally stable (Q5), while
the IRS3B disk is consistent with a gravitationally unstable disk (Q1)
between the radii 200-500~au. This coincides with the location of the spiral
arms and the tertiary companion IRS3B-c, supporting the hypothesis that IRS3B-c
was formed in situ via fragmentation of a gravitationally unstable disk
Recommended from our members
A triple protostar system formed via fragmentation of a gravitationally unstable disk
Binary and multiple star systems are a frequent outcome of the star formation process(1,2) and as a result almost half of all stars with masses similar to that of the Sun have at least one companion star(3). Theoretical studies indicate that there are two main pathways that can operate concurrently to form binary/multiple star systems: large-scale fragmentation of turbulent gas cores and filaments(4,5) or smaller-scale fragmentation of a massive protostellar disk due to gravitational instability(6,7). Observational evidence for turbulent fragmentation on scales of more than 1,000 astronomical units has recently emerged(8,9). Previous evidence for disk fragmentation was limited to inferences based on the separations of more-evolved pre-main sequence and protostellar multiple systems(10-13). The triple protostar system L1448 IRS3B is an ideal system with which to search for evidence of disk fragmentation as it is in an early phase of the star formation process, it is likely to be less than 150,000 years old(14) and all of the protostars in the system are separated by less than 200 astronomical units. Here we report observations of dust and molecular gas emission that reveal a disk with a spiral structure surrounding the three protostars. Two protostars near the centre of the disk are separated by 61 astronomical units and a tertiary protostar is coincident with a spiral arm in the outer disk at a separation of 183 astronomical units(13). The inferred mass of the central pair of protostellar objects is approximately one solar mass, while the disk surrounding the three protostars has a total mass of around 0.30 solar masses. The tertiary protostar itself has a minimum mass of about 0.085 solar masses. We demonstrate that the disk around L1448 IRS3B appears susceptible to disk fragmentation at radii between 150 and 320 astronomical units, overlapping with the location of the tertiary protostar. This is consistent with models for a protostellar disk that has recently undergone gravitational instability, spawning one or two companion stars
Tracing the young massive high-eccentricity binary system Theta 1 Orionis C through periastron passage
The nearby high-mass star binary system Theta 1 Orionis C is the brightest
and most massive of the Trapezium OB stars at the core of the Orion Nebula
Cluster, and it represents a perfect laboratory to determine the fundamental
parameters of young hot stars and to constrain the distance of the Orion
Trapezium Cluster. Between January 2007 and March 2008, we observed T1OriC with
VLTI/AMBER near-infrared (H- and K-band) long-baseline interferometry, as well
as with bispectrum speckle interferometry with the ESO 3.6m and the BTA 6m
telescopes (B'- and V'-band). Combining AMBER data taken with three different
3-telescope array configurations, we reconstructed the first VLTI/AMBER
closure-phase aperture synthesis image, showing the T1OriC system with a
resolution of approx. 2 mas. To extract the astrometric data from our
spectrally dispersed AMBER data, we employed a new algorithm, which fits the
wavelength-differential visibility and closure phase modulations along the H-
and K-band and is insensitive to calibration errors induced, for instance, by
changing atmospheric conditions. Our new astrometric measurements show that the
companion has nearly completed one orbital revolution since its discovery in
1997. The derived orbital elements imply a short-period (P=11.3 yrs) and
high-eccentricity orbit (e=0.6) with periastron passage around 2002.6. The new
orbit is consistent with recently published radial velocity measurements, from
which we can also derive the first direct constraints on the mass ratio of the
binary components. We employ various methods to derive the system mass
(M_system=44+/-7 M_sun) and the dynamical distance (d=410+/-20 pc), which is in
remarkably good agreement with recently published trigonometric parallax
measurements obtained with radio interferometry.Comment: 15 pages, 15 figures, accepted by A&
Orbital Architectures of Planet-Hosting Binaries:I. Forming Five Small Planets in the Truncated Disk of Kepler-444A
We present the first results from our Keck program investigating the orbital
architectures of planet-hosting multiple star systems. Kepler-444 is a
metal-poor triple star system that hosts five sub-Earth-sized planets orbiting
the primary star (Kepler-444A), as well as a spatially unresolved pair of M
dwarfs (Kepler-444BC) at a projected distance of 1.8" (66 AU). We combine our
Keck/NIRC2 adaptive optics astrometry with multi-epoch Keck/HIRES RVs of all
three stars to determine a precise orbit for the BC pair around A, given their
empirically constrained masses. We measure minimal astrometric motion
( mas yr, or km s), but our RVs reveal
significant orbital velocity ( km s) and acceleration
( m s yr). We determine a highly eccentric stellar
orbit () that brings the tight M dwarf pair within
AU of the planetary system. We validate that the system is
dynamically stable in its present configuration via n-body simulations. We find
that the ABC orbit and planetary orbits are likely aligned (98%) given that
they both have edge-on orbits and misalignment induces precession of the
planets out of transit. We conclude that the stars were likely on their current
orbits during the epoch of planet formation, truncating the protoplanetary disk
at 2 AU. This truncated disk would have been severely depleted of
solid material from which to form the total 1.5 of
planets. We thereby strongly constrain the efficiency of the conversion of dust
into planets and suggest that the Kepler-444 system is consistent with models
that explain the formation of more typical close-in Kepler planets in normal,
not truncated, disks.Comment: accepted to Ap
Stability of self-gravitating discs under irradiation
Self-gravity becomes competitive as an angular momentum transport process in
accretion discs at large radii, where the temperature is low enough that
external irradiation likely contributes to the thermal balance. Irradiation is
known to weaken the strength of disc self-gravity, and can suppress it entirely
if the disc is maintained above the threshold for linear instability. However,
its impact on the susceptibility of the disc to fragmentation is less clear. We
use two-dimensional numerical simulations to investigate the evolution of
self-gravitating discs as a function of the local cooling time and strength of
irradiation. In the regime where the disc does not fragment, we show that local
thermal equilibrium continues to determine the stress - which can be
represented as an effective viscous alpha - out to very long cooling times (at
least 240 dynamical times). In this regime, the power spectrum of the
perturbations is uniquely set by the effective viscous alpha and not by the
cooling rate. Fragmentation occurs for cooling times tau < beta_crit / Omega,
where beta_crit is a weak function of the level of irradiation. We find that
beta_crit declines by approximately a factor of two, as irradiation is
increased from zero up to the level where instability is almost quenched. The
numerical results imply that irradiation cannot generally avert fragmentation
of self-gravitating discs at large radii; if other angular momentum transport
sources are weak mass will build up until self-gravity sets in, and
fragmentation will ensue.Comment: MNRAS, in pres
The VLA Nascent Disk And Multiplicity (VANDAM) Survey of Perseus Protostars. Resolving the Sub-Arcsecond Binary System in NGC 1333 IRAS2A
We are conducting a Jansky VLA Ka-band (8 mm and 1 cm) and C-band (4 cm and
6.4 cm) survey of all known protostars in the Perseus Molecular Cloud,
providing resolution down to 0.06'' and 0.35" in Ka-band and
C-band, respectively. Here we present first results from this survey that
enable us to examine the source NGC 1333 IRAS2A in unprecedented detail and
resolve it into a proto-binary system separated by 0.621"0.006" (143
AU) at 8 mm, 1 cm, and 4 cm. These 2 sources (IRAS2A VLA1 and VLA2) are likely
driving the two orthogonal outflows known to originate from IRAS2A. The
brighter source IRAS2A VLA1 is extended perpendicular to its outflow in the VLA
data, with a deconvolved size of 0.055" (13 AU), possibly tracing a
protostellar disk. The recently reported candidate companions (IRAS2A MM2 and
MM3) are not detected in either our VLA data, CARMA 1.3 mm data, or SMA 850
m data. SMA CO (), CARMA CO (), and
lower resolution CARMA CO () observations are used to examine
the outflow origins and the nature of the candidate companions to IRAS2A VLA1.
The CO () and () data show that IRAS2A MM2 is
coincident with a bright CO emission spot in the east-west outflow, and IRAS2A
MM3 is within the north-south outflow. In contrast, IRAS2A VLA2 lies at the
east-west outflow symmetry point. We propose that IRAS2A VLA2 is the driving
source of the East-West outflow and a true companion to IRAS2A VLA1, whereas
IRAS2A MM2 and MM3 may not be protostellar.Comment: Accepted to ApJ, 27 pages, 6 Figures, 2 Table
ATCA 3mm observations of NGC6334I and I(N): dense cores, outflows and an UCHII region
Aims: Investigation of the dense gas, the outflows and the continuum emission
from the massive twin cores NGC6334I and I(N) at high spatial resolution.
Methods: We imaged the region with the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA)
at 3.4mm wavelength in continuum as well as CH3CN(5_K-4_K) and HCN(1-0)
spectral line emission. Results: While the continuum emission in NGC6334I
mainly traces the UCHII region, toward NGC6334I(N) we detect line emission from
four of the previously identified dust continuum condensations that are of
protostellar or pre-stellar nature. The CH3CN(5_K-4_K) lines are detected in
all K-components up to energies of 128K above ground toward two protostellar
condensations in both regions. We find line-width increasing with increasing K
for all sources, which indicates a higher degree of internal motions closer to
the central protostars. Toward the main mm and CH3CN source in NGC6334I we
identify a velocity gradient approximately perpendicular to the large-scale
molecular outflow. This may be interpreted as a signature of an accretion disk,
although other scenarios, e.g., an unresolved double source, could produce a
similar signature as well. No comparable signature is found toward any of the
other sources. HCN does not trace the dense gas well but it is dominated by the
molecular outflows. While the outflow in NGC6334I exhibits a normal Hubble-law
like velocity structure, the data indicate a precessing outflow close to the
plane of the sky for NGC6334I(N). Furthermore, we observe a wide (~15.4km/s)
HCN absorption line, much broader than the previously observed CH3OH and NH3
absorption lines. Several explanations for the difference are discussed.Comment: 14 pages, 14 figures, accepted for A&
Accreting Protoplanets in the LkCa 15 Transition Disk
Exoplanet detections have revolutionized astronomy, offering new insights
into solar system architecture and planet demographics. While nearly 1900
exoplanets have now been discovered and confirmed, none are still in the
process of formation. Transition discs, protoplanetary disks with inner
clearings best explained by the influence of accreting planets, are natural
laboratories for the study of planet formation. Some transition discs show
evidence for the presence of young planets in the form of disc asymmetries or
infrared sources detected within their clearings, as in the case of LkCa 15.
Attempts to observe directly signatures of accretion onto protoplanets have
hitherto proven unsuccessful. Here we report adaptive optics observations of
LkCa 15 that probe within the disc clearing. With accurate source positions
over multiple epochs spanning 2009 - 2015, we infer the presence of multiple
companions on Keplerian orbits. We directly detect H{\alpha} emission from the
innermost companion, LkCa 15 b, evincing hot (~10,000 K) gas falling deep into
the potential well of an accreting protoplanet.Comment: 35 pages, 3 figures, 1 table, 9 extended data item
- …