6,893 research outputs found
Coronal activity with XMM-Newton and Chandra
XMM-Newton and Chandra have greatly deepened our knowledge of stellar coronae
giving access to a variety of new diagnostics such that nowadays a review of
stellar X-ray astronomy necessarily must focus on a few selected topics.
Attempting to provide a limited but representative overview of recent
discoveries I discuss three subjects: the solar-stellar connection, the nature
of coronae in limiting regimes of stellar dynamos, and "hot topics" on X-ray
emission from pre-main sequence stars.Comment: invited review to appear in Proc. of the 15th Workshop on Cool Stars,
Stellar Systems and the Su
Accretion, disks, and magnetic activity in the TW Hya association
We present new photometric and spectroscopic data for the M-type members of
the TW Hya association with the aim of a comprehensive study of accretion,
disks and magnetic activity at the critical age of ~10 Myr where circumstellar
matter disappears.Comment: 4 pages, to appear in Proceedings IAU Symposium No. 314, Young Stars
& Planets Near the Sun, 201
Star formation history of Canis Major OB1 - II. A bimodal X-ray population revealed by XMM-Newton
The Canis Major OB1 Association has an intriguing scenario of star formation,
especially in the Canis Major R1 (CMa R1) region traditionally assigned to a
reflection nebula, but in reality an ionized region. This work is focused on
the young stellar population associated to CMa R1, for which our previous
results from ROSAT, optical and near-infrared data had revealed two stellar
groups with different ages, suggesting a possible mixing of populations
originated from distinct star-formation episodes. The X-ray data allow the
detected sources to be characterized according to hardness ratios, light curves
and spectra. Estimates of mass and age were obtained from the 2MASS catalogue,
and used to define a complete subsample of stellar counterparts, for
statistical purposes. A catalogue of 387 XMM-Newton sources is provided, 78%
being confirmed as members or probable members of the CMa R1 association.
Flares were observed for 13 sources, and the spectra of 21 bright sources could
be fitted by a thermal plasma model. Mean values of fits parameters were used
to estimate X-ray luminosities. We found a minimum value of log(L[erg/s]) =
29.43, indicating that our sample of low-mass stars (M 0.5
M), being faint X-ray emitters, is incomplete. Among the 250 objects
selected as our complete subsample (defining our best sample), 171 are found to
the East of the cloud, near Z CMa and dense molecular gas, 50% of them being
young ( 10 Myr). The opposite happens to the
West, near GU CMa, in areas lacking molecular gas: among 79 objects, 30% are
young and 50% are older. These findings confirm that a first episode of
distributed star formation occurred in the whole studied region ~10 Myr ago and
dispersed the molecular gas, while a second, localized episode (< 5 Myr) took
place in the regions where molecular gas is still present.Comment: 38 pages, 21 figures, accepted for A&
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