769 research outputs found
The Onset of Planet Formation in Brown Dwarf Disks
The onset of planet formation in protoplanetary disks is marked by the growth
and crystallization of sub-micron-sized dust grains accompanied by dust
settling toward the disk mid-plane. Here we present infrared spectra of disks
around brown dwarfs and brown dwarf candidates. We show that all three
processes occur in such cool disks in a way similar or identical to that in
disks around low- and intermediate-mass stars. These results indicate that the
onset of planet formation extends to disks around brown dwarfs, suggesting that
planet formation is a robust process occurring in most young circumstellar
disks.Comment: Published in Science 2005, vol 310, 834; 3 pages in final format, 4
figures + 8 pages Supporting Online Material. For final typeset, see
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/310/5749/834?eto
The effect of local optically thick regions in the long-wave emission of young circumstellar disks
Multi-wavelength observations of protoplanetary disks in the sub-millimeter
continuum have measured spectral indices values which are significantly lower
than what is found in the diffuse interstellar medium. Under the assumption
that mm-wave emission of disks is mostly optically thin, these data have been
generally interpreted as evidence for the presence of mm/cm-sized pebbles in
the disk outer regions. In this work we investigate the effect of possible
local optically thick regions on the mm-wave emission of protoplanetary disks
without mm/cm-sized grains. A significant local increase of the optical depth
in the disk can be caused by the concentration of solid particles, as predicted
to result from a variety of proposed physical mechanisms. We calculate the
filling factors and implied overdensities these optically thick regions would
need to significantly affect the millimeter fluxes of disks, and we discuss
their plausibility. We find that optically thick regions characterized by
relatively small filling factors can reproduce the mm-data of young disks
without requesting emission from mm/cm-sized pebbles. However, these optically
thick regions require dust overdensities much larger than what predicted by any
of the physical processes proposed in the literature to drive the concentration
of solids. We find that only for the most massive disks it is possible and
plausible to imagine that the presence of optically thick regions in the disk
is responsible for the low measured values of the mm spectral index. For the
majority of the disk population, optically thin emission from a population of
large mm-sized grains remains the most plausible explanation. The results of
this analysis further strengthen the scenario for which the measured low
spectral indices of protoplanetary disks at mm wavelengths are due to the
presence of large mm/cm-sized pebbles in the disk outer regions.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures, A&A in pres
Large grains in the disk of CQ Tau
We present 7mm observations of the dusty disk surrounding the 10 Myr old 1.5
Msun pre-main-sequence star CQ Tauri obtained at the Very Large Array with 0.8
arcsecond resolution and 0.1 mJy rms sensitivity. These observations resolve
the 7mm emission in approximately the north-south direction, confirming
previous results obtained with lower resolution. We use a two-layer flared disk
model to interpret the observed fluxes from 7mm to 1.3mm together with the
resolved 7mm structure. We find that the disk radius is constrained to the
range 100 to 300 AU, depending on the steepness of the disk surface density
distribution. The power law index of the dust opacity coefficient, beta, is
constrained to be 0.5 to 0.7. Since the models indicate that the disk is
optically thin at millimeter wavelengths for radii greater than 8 AU, the
contribution of an optically thick region to the emission is less than 10%.
This implies that high optical depth or complex disk geometry cannot be the
cause of the observed shallow millimeter spectral index. Instead, the new
analysis supports the earlier suggestion that dust particles in the disk have
grown to sizes as large as a few centimeters. The dust in the CQ Tauri system
appears to be evolved much like that in the TW Hydra system, a well-studied
pre-main-sequence star of similar age and lower mass. The survival of gas-rich
disks with incomplete grain evolution at such old ages deserves further
investigations.Comment: A&A in press, 7 pages, 5 figure
T-cell modulation for the treatment of chronic plaque psoriasis with efalizumab (Raptiva (TM)): Mechanisms of action
Psoriasis is a chronic, incurable, auto-immune disorder with cutaneous manifestations. New evidence on the central role of the immune system in the pathogenesis of psoriasis increasingly provides insight into pathogenic steps that can be modulated to provide disease control. Numerous biological therapies are in various stages of clinical development, with expectation of providing enhanced safety and efficacy over currently available psoriasis therapies. Efalizumab, a recombinant humanized monoclonal IgG1 antibody, is a novel targeted T-cell modulator that inhibits multiple steps in the immune cascade that result in the production and maintenance of psoriatic plaques, including initial T-cell activation and T-cell trafficking into sites of inflammation, including psoriatic skin, with subsequent reactivation in these sites. This article reviews the pharmacodynamic, pharmacokinetic and clinical effects observed during phase I, II and III efalizumab trials in patients with moderate to severe chronic plaque psoriasis. Copyright (C) 2004 S. Karger AG, Basel
Connection between jets, winds and accretion in T Tauri stars: the X-shooter view
We have analysed the [OI]6300 A line in a sample of 131 young stars with
discs in the Lupus, Chamaeleon and signa Orionis star forming regions, observed
with the X-shooter spectrograph at VLT. The stars have mass accretion rates
spanning from 10^{-12} to 10^{-7} Mo/yr. The line profile was deconvolved into
a low velocity component (LVC,
40 km/s ), originating from slow winds and high velocity jets, respectively.
The LVC is by far the most frequent component, with a detection rate of 77%,
while only 30% of sources have a HVC. The [OI]6300 luminosity of both the LVC
and HVC, when detected, correlates with stellar and accretion parameters of the
central sources (i.e. Lstar , Mstar , Lacc , Macc), with similar slopes for the
two components. The line luminosity correlates better with the accretion
luminosity than with the stellar luminosity or stellar mass. We suggest that
accretion is the main drivers for the line excitation and that MHD disc-winds
are at the origin of both components. In the sub-sample of Lupus sources
observed with ALMA a relationship is found between the HVC peak velocity and
the outer disc inclination angle, as expected if the HVC traces jets ejected
perpendicularly to the disc plane. Mass loss rates measured from the HVC span
from ~ 10^{-13} to ~10^{-7} Mo/yr. The corresponding Mloss/Macc ratio ranges
from ~0.01 to ~0.5, with an average value of 0.07. However, considering the
upper limits on the HVC, we infer a ratio < 0.03 in more than 40% of sources.
We argue that most of these sources might lack the physical conditions needed
for an efficient magneto-centrifugal acceleration in the star-disc interaction
region. Systematic observations of populations of younger stars, that is, class
0/I, are needed to explore how the frequency and role of jets evolve during the
pre-main sequence phase.Comment: 15 pages, 14 figures, Accepted for publication in A&
Grain growth and dust settling in a brown dwarf disk: Gemini/T-ReCS observations of CFHT-BD-Tau 4
We present accurate mid-infrared observations of the disk around the young,
bona-fide brown dwarf CFHT-BD-Tau 4. We report GEMINI/T-ReCS measurements in
the 7.9, 10.4 and 12.3 micron filters, from which we infer the presence of a
prominent, broad silicate emission feature. The shape of the silicate feature
is dominated by emission from 2 micron amorphous olivine grains. Such grains,
being an order of magnitude larger than those in the interstellar medium, are a
first proof of dust processing and grain growth in disks around brown dwarfs.
The object's spectral energy distribution is below the prediction of the
classical flared disk model but higher than that of the two-layer flat disk. A
good match can be achieved by using an intermediate disk model with strongly
reduced but non-zero flaring. Grain growth and dust settling processes provide
a natural explanation for this disk geometry and we argue that such
intermediate flaring might explain the observations of several other brown
dwarf disks as well.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics Letters, 4.5
pages with 1 figur
The circumstellar environment of HD50138 revealed by VLTI/AMBER at high angular resolution
HD50138 is a Herbig B[e] star with a circumstellar disc detected at IR and mm
wavelength. Its brightness makes it a good candidate for NIR interferometry
observations. We aim to resolve, spatially and spectrally, the continuum and
hydrogen emission lines in the 2.12-2.47 micron region, to shed light on the
immediate circumstellar environment of the star. VLTI/AMBER K-band observations
provide spectra, visibilities, differential phases, and closure phases along
three long baselines for the continuum, and HI emission in Br and five
high-n Pfund lines. By computing the pure-line visibilities, we derive the
angular size of the different line-emitting regions. A simple LTE model was
created to constrain the physical conditions of HI emitting region. The
continuum region cannot be reproduced by a geometrical 2D elongated Gaussian
fitting model. We estimate the size of the region to be 1 au. We find the
Br and Pfund lines come from a more compact region of size 0.4 au. The
Br line exhibits an S-shaped differential phase, indicative of
rotation. The continuum and Br line closure phase show offsets of
-255 and 2010, respectively. This is evidence of an
asymmetry in their origin, but with opposing directions. We find that we cannot
converge on constraints for the HI physical parameters without a more detailed
model. Our analysis reveals that HD50138 hosts a complex circumstellar
environment. Its continuum emission cannot be reproduced by a simple disc
brightness distribution. Similarly, several components must be evoked to
reproduce the interferometric observables within the Br, line.
Combining the spectroscopic and interferometric data of the Br and
Pfund lines favours an origin in a wind region with a large opening angle.
Finally, our results point to an evolved source.Comment: accepted for publication in A&
The IC1396N proto-cluster at a scale of 250 AU
We investigate the mm-morphology of IC1396N with unprecedented spatial
resolution to analyze its dust and molecular gas properties, and draw
comparisons with objects of similar mass. We have carried out sensitive
observations in the most extended configurations of the IRAM Plateau de Bure
interferometer, to map the thermal dust emission at 3.3 and 1.3mm, and the
emission from the =13 hyperfine transitions of methyl cyanide
(CHCN). We unveil the existence of a sub-cluster of hot cores in IC1396N,
distributed in a direction perpendicular to the emanating outflow. The cores
are embedded in a common envelope of extended and diffuse dust emission. We
find striking differences in the dust properties of the cores ( 0)
and the surrounding envelope ( 1), very likely testifying to
differences in the formation and processing of dust material. The CHCN
emission peaks towards the most massive hot core and is marginally extended in
the outflow direction
Exploring the dimming event of RW Aur A through multi-epoch VLT/X-Shooter spectroscopy
RW Aur A is a CTTS that has suddenly undergone three major dimming events
since 2010. We aim to understand the dimming properties, examine accretion
variability, and derive the physical properties of the inner disc traced by the
CO ro-vibrational emission at NIR wavelengths (2.3 mic).
We compared two epochs of X-Shooter observations, during and after the
dimming. We modelled the rarely detected CO bandhead emission in both epochs to
examine whether the inner disc properties had changed. The SED was used to
derive the extinction properties of the dimmed spectrum and compare the
infrared excess between the two epochs. Lines tracing accretion were used to
derive the mass accretion rate in both states. The CO originates from a region
with physical properties of T=3000 K, N=1x10 cm and
vsini=113 km/s. The extinction properties of the dimming layer were derived
with the effective optical depth ranging from teff 2.5-1.5 from the UV to the
NIR. The inferred mass accretion rate Macc is Msun/yr and Msun/yr after and during the dimming respectively. By fitting the
SED, additional emission is observed in the IR during the dimming event from
dust grains with temperatures of 500-700K. The physical conditions traced by
the CO are similar for both epochs, indicating that the inner gaseous disc
properties do not change during the dimming events. The extinction curve is
flatter than that of the ISM, and large grains of a few hundred microns are
thus required. When we correct for the observed extinction, Macc is constant in
the two epochs, suggesting that the accretion is stable and therefore does not
cause the dimming. The additional hot emission in the NIR is located at about
0.5 au from the star. The dimming events could be due to a dust-laden wind, a
severe puffing-up of the inner rim, or a perturbation caused by the recent
star-disc encounter.Comment: Accepted by Astronomy & Astrophysic
Passive irradiated circumstellar disks with an inner hole
A model for irradiated dust disks around Herbig Ae stars is proposed. The
model is based on the flaring disk model of Chiang & Goldreich (1997), but with
the central regions of the disk removed. The inner rim of the disk is puffed up
and is much hotter than the rest of the disk, because it is directly exposed to
the stellar flux. If located at the dust evaporation radius, its reemitted flux
produces a conspicuous bump in the SED which peaks at 2-3 micron. We propose
that this emission is the explanation for the near-infrared bump observed in
the SEDs of Herbig Ae stars. We study for which stellar parameters this bump
would be observable, and find that it is the case for Herbig Ae stellar
parameters but not for T-Tauri stars, confirming what is found from the
observations. We also study the effects of the shadow cast by the inner rim
over the rest of the flaring disk. The shadowed region can be quite large, and
under some circumstances the entire disk may lie in the shadow. This shadowed
region will be much cooler than an unshadowed flaring disk, since its only
heating sources are radial radiative diffusion and possible indirect sources of
irradiation. Under certain special circumstances the shadowing effect can
suppress, or even completely eliminate, the 10 micron emission feature from the
spectrum, which might explain the anomalous SEDs of some isolated Herbig Ae
stars in the sample of Meeus et al. (2001). At much larger radii the disk
emerges from the shadow, and continues as a flaring disk towards the outer
edge. The complete model, including structure of the inner edge, shadowed
region and the flared outer part, is described in detail in this paper, and we
show examples of the general behavior of the model for varying parameters.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa
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