2,406 research outputs found
Star formation triggered by SN explosions: an application to the stellar association of Pictoris
In the present study, considering the physical conditions that are relevant
in interactions between supernova remnants (SNRs) and dense molecular clouds
for triggering star formation we have built a diagram of SNR radius versus
cloud density in which the constraints above delineate a shaded zone where star
formation is allowed. We have also performed fully 3-D radiatively cooling
numerical simulations of the impact between SNRs and clouds under different
initial conditions in order to follow the initial steps of these interactions.
We determine the conditions that may lead either to cloud collapse and star
formation or to complete cloud destruction and find that the numerical results
are consistent with those of the SNR-cloud density diagram. Finally, we have
applied the results above to the Pictoris stellar association which is
composed of low mass Post-T Tauri stars with an age of 11 Myr. It has been
recently suggested that its formation could have been triggered by the shock
wave produced by a SN explosion localized at a distance of about 62 pc that may
have occurred either in the Lower Centaurus Crux (LCC) or in the Upper
Centaurus Lupus (UCL) which are both nearby older subgroups of that association
(Ortega and co-workers). Using the results of the analysis above we have shown
that the suggested origin for the young association at the proposed distance is
plausible only for a very restricted range of initial conditions for the parent
molecular cloud, i.e., a cloud with a radius of the order of 10 pc and density
of the order of 20 cm and a temperature of the order of 50100 K.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figures, to appear in MNRA
SACY - a Search for Associations Containing Young stars
The scientific goal of the SACY (Search for Associations Containing
Young-stars) was to identify possible associations of stars younger than the
Pleiades Association among optical counterparts of the ROSAT X-ray bright
sources. High-resolution spectra for possible optical counterparts later than
G0 belonging to HIPPARCOS and/or TYCHO-2 catalogs were obtained in order to
assess both the youth and the spatial motion of each target. More than 1000
ROSAT sources were observed, covering a large area in the Southern Hemisphere.
The newly identified young stars present a patchy distribution in UVW and XYZ,
revealing the existence of huge nearby young associations. Here we present the
associations identified in this survey.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, to appear in the Proceedings of Open Issues in
Local Formation and Early Stellar Evolution, Ouro Preto, Brazi
On Lifetimes of Dusty Debris Disks around A-type Stars
Fil: Chavero, Carolina Andrea. Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Observatorio Astronómico de Córdoba; Argentina.Abstract: Using a collection of 40 debris disks (DD) around dwarf A-type stars (from which 17 are spatially resolved) having well determined stellar ages (Vican 2012), we found that for a collisional self-stirring model of flux distributions (Kenyon & Bromley, 2008, 2010) dusty DD occupy for a large part the terminal age positions corresponding the end of the MS phase. This situation does not necessarily mean that the dust generation in these DD is finished at this stage. Dusty DD can continue their lives in the next Post-MS stages, as is the case of the recent first resolved dusty DD with planets around the K-type subgiant star Kappa CrB. This star is considered a ``retired´´ A star (Bonsor et al. 2013). In order to explain the apparent lack of dusty DD in the giant phase, we propose here that this could be due, in part, to a dilution of any planetesimal belt existing around these stars, with the corresponding diminishing of collisions and subsequent dust generation. This dilution is provoked by the dynamical expansion of this belt produced by the important stellar mass loss during the RGB phase. This scenario is being studied by means of numerical simulations by de la Reza, Roig & Chavero (in preparation).http://journals.cambridge.org/download.php?file=%2FIAU%2FIAU8_S299%2FS1743921313008831a.pdf&code=1bb2a189da69df2d91802b67ab63f032Astronomía (incluye Astrofísica y Ciencias del Espacio
- …