296 research outputs found
X-Shooter observations of low-mass stars in the Eta Chamaeleontis association
The nearby Eta Chamaeleontis association is a collection of 4-10 Myr old
stars with a disk fraction of 35-45%. In this study, the broad wavelength
coverage of VLT/X-Shooter is used to measure the stellar and mass accretion
properties of 15 low mass stars in the Eta Chamaeleontis association. For each
star, the observed spectrum is fitted with a non-accreting stellar template and
an accretion spectrum obtained from assuming a plane-parallel hydrogen slab.
Five of the eight stars with an IR disk excess show excess UV emission,
indicating ongoing accretion. The accretion rates measured here are similar to
those obtained from previous measurements of excess UV emission, but tend to be
higher than past measurements from H-alpha modeling. The mass accretion rates
are consistent with those of other young star forming regions.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic
Empirical Isochrones for Low Mass Stars in Nearby Young Associations
Absolute ages of young stars are important for many issues in pre-main
sequence stellar and circumstellar evolution but are long recognized as
difficult to derive and calibrate. In this paper, we use literature spectral
types and photometry to construct empirical isochrones in HR diagrams for
low-mass stars and brown dwarfs in the eta Cha, epsilon Cha, and TW Hya
Associations and the beta Pic and Tuc-Hor Moving Groups. A successful theory of
pre-main sequence evolution should match the shapes of the stellar loci for
these groups of young stars. However, when comparing the combined empirical
isochrones to isochrones predicted from evolutionary models, discrepancies lead
to a spectral type (mass) dependence in stellar age estimates. Improved
prescriptions for convection and boundary conditions in the latest models of
pre-main sequence models lead to a significantly improved correspondence
between empirical and model isochrones, with small offsets at low temperatures
that may be explained by observational uncertainties or by model limitations.
Independent of model predictions, linear fits to combined stellar loci of these
regions provide a simple empirical method to order clusters by luminosity with
a reduced dependence on spectral type. Age estimates calculated from various
sets of modern models that reproduce Li depletion boundary ages of the beta Pic
Moving Group also imply a ~4 Myr age for the low mass members of the Upper Sco
OB Association, which is younger than the 11 Myr age that has been recently
estimated for intermediate mass members.Comment: Accepted by ApJ, 18 page
An Optical Spectroscopic Study of T Tauri Stars. I. Photospheric Properties
Measurements of masses and ages of young stars from their location in the HR
diagram are limited by not only the typical observational uncertainties that
apply to field stars, but also by large systematic uncertainties related to
circumstellar phenomena. In this paper, we analyze flux calibrated optical
spectra to measure accurate spectral types and extinctions of 283 nearby T
Tauri stars. The primary advances in this paper are (1) the incorporation of a
simplistic accretion continuum in optical spectral type and extinction
measurements calculated over the full optical wavelength range and (2) the
uniform analysis of a large sample of stars. Comparisons between the
non-accreting TTS photospheric templates and stellar photosphere models are
used to derive conversions from spectral type to temperature. Differences
between spectral types can be subtle and difficult to discern, especially when
accounting for accretion and extinction. The spectral types measured here are
mostly consistent with spectral types measured over the past decade. However,
our new spectral types are 1-2 subclasses later than literature spectral types
for the original members of the TWA and are discrepant with literature values
for some well known Taurus CTTSs. Our extinction measurements are consistent
with other optical extinction measurements but are typically 1 mag lower than
nIR measurements, likely the result of methodological differences and the
presence of nIR excesses in most CTTSs. As an illustration of the impact of
accretion, SpT, and extinction uncertainties on the HR diagrams of young
clusters, we find that the resulting luminosity spread of stars in the TWA is
15-30%. The luminosity spread in the TWA and previously measured for binary
stars in Taurus suggests that for a majority of stars, protostellar accretion
rates are not large enough to significantly alter the subsequent evolution.Comment: Accepted by ApJ. 30 pages plus 12 pages of Tables and Reference
Age spreads and the temperature dependence of age estimates in Upper Sco
Past estimates for the age of the Upper Sco Association are typically 11-13
Myr for intermediate-mass stars and 4-5 Myr for low-mass stars. In this study,
we simulate populations of young stars to investigate whether this apparent
dependence of estimated age on spectral type may be explained by the star
formation history of the association. Solar and intermediate mass stars begin
their pre-main sequence evolution on the Hayashi track, with fully convective
interiors and cool photospheres. Intermediate mass stars quickly heat up and
transition onto the radiative Henyey track. As a consequence, for clusters in
which star formation occurs on a similar timescale as the transition from a
convective to a radiative interior, discrepancies in ages will arise when ages
are calculated as a function of temperature instead of mass. Simple simulations
of a cluster with constant star formation over several Myr may explain about
half of the difference in inferred ages versus photospheric temperature;
speculative constructions that consist of a constant star formation followed by
a large supernova-driven burst could fully explain the differences, including
those between F and G stars where evolutionary tracks may be more accurate. The
age spreads of low-mass stars predicted from these prescriptions for star
formation are consistent with the observed luminosity spread of Upper Sco. The
conclusion that a lengthy star formation history will yield a temperature
dependence in ages is expected from the basic physics of pre-main sequence
evolution and is qualitatively robust to the large uncertainties in pre-main
sequence evolutionary models.Comment: 13 pages, accepted by Ap
Continuum Variability of Deeply Embedded Protostars as a Probe of Envelope Structure
Stars may be assembled in large growth spurts, however the evidence for this
hypothesis is circumstantial. Directly studying the accretion at the earliest
phases of stellar growth is challenging because young stars are deeply embedded
in optically thick envelopes, which have spectral energy distributions that
peak in the far-IR, where observations are difficult. In this paper, we
consider the feasibility of detecting accretion outbursts from these younger
stars by investigating the timescales for how the protostellar envelope
responds to changes in the emission properties of the central source. The
envelope heats up in response to an outburst, brightening at all wavelengths
and with the emission peak moving to shorter wavelengths. The timescale for
this change depends on the time for dust grains to heat and re-emit photons and
the time required for the energy to escape the inner, optically-thick portion
of the envelope. We find that the dust response time is much shorter than the
photon propagation time and thus the timescale over which the emission varies
is set by time delays imposed by geometry. These times are hours to days near
the peak of the spectral energy distribution and weeks to months in the sub-mm.
The ideal location to quickly detect continuum variability is therefore in the
mid- to far-IR, near the peak of the spectral energy distribution, where the
change in emission amplitude is largest. Searching for variability in sub-mm
continuum emission is also feasible, though with a longer time separation and a
weaker relationship between the amount of detected emission amplitude and
change in central source luminosity. Such observations would constrain
accretion histories of protostars and would help to trace the disk/envelope
instabilities that lead to stellar growth.Comment: 25 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
How Hot is the Wind from TW Hydrae?
It has recently been suggested that the winds from Classical T Tauri stars in
general, and the wind from TW Hya in particular, reaches temperatures of at
least 300,000 K while maintaing a mass loss rate of \Msol
yr or larger. If confirmed, this would place strong new requirements on
wind launching and heating models. We therefore re-examine spectra from the
Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph aboard the Hubble Space Telescope and
spectra from the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer satellite in an effort
to better constrain the maximum temperature in the wind of TW Hya. We find
clear evidence for a wind in the \ion{C}{2} doublet at 1037 \AA and in the
\ion{C}{2} multiplet at 1335 \AA. We find no wind absorption in the \ion{C}{4}
1550 \AA doublet observed at the same time as the \ion{C}{2} 1335 \AA line or
in observations of \ion{O}{6} observed simultaneously with the \ion{C}{2} 1037
\AA line. The presence or absence of \ion{C}{3} wind absorption is ambiguous.
The clear lack of a wind in the \ion{C}{4} line argues that the wind from TW
Hya does not reach the 100,000 K characteristic formation temperature of this
line. We therefore argue that the available evidence suggests that the wind
from TW Hya, and probably all classical T Tauri stars, reaches a maximum
temperature in the range of 10,000 -- 30,000 K.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figures, Figure 1 in 2nd version fixes a small velocity
scaling error and new revision adds a reference to an additional paper
recently foun
An Enhanced Spectroscopic Census of the Orion Nebula Cluster
We report new spectral types or spectral classification constraints for over
600 stars in the Orion Nebula Cluster (ONC) based on medium resolution R~
1500-2000 red optical spectra acquired using the Palomar 200" and Kitt Peak
3.5m telescopes. Spectral types were initially estimated for F, G, and early K
stars from atomic line indices while for late K and M stars, constituting the
majority of our sample, indices involving TiO and VO bands were used. To ensure
proper classification, particularly for reddened, veiled, or
nebula-contaminated stars, all spectra were then visually examined for type
verification or refinement. We provide an updated spectral type table that
supersedes Hillenbrand (1997), increasing the percentage of optically visible
ONC stars with spectral type information from 68% to 90%. However, for many
objects, repeated observations have failed to yield spectral types primarily
due to the challenges of adequate sky subtraction against a bright and
spatially variable nebular background. The scatter between our new and our
previously determined spectral types is approximately 2 spectral sub-classes.
We also compare our grating spectroscopy results with classification based on
narrow-band TiO filter photometry from Da Rio et al. (2012, finding similar
scatter. While the challenges of working in the ONC may explain much of the
spread, we highlight several stars showing significant and unexplained bona
fide spectral variations in observations taken several years apart; these and
similar cases could be due to a combination of accretion and extinction
changes. Finally, nearly 20% of ONC stars exhibit obvious Ca II triplet
emission indicative of strong accretion.Comment: Accepted to the Astronomical Journal; 37 pages, including 11 Figures
and 3 Tables (one long table not reproduced here but available upon request
or from the journal
CO/H2 Abundance Ratio ~ 10^{-4} in a Protoplanetary Disk
The relative abundances of atomic and molecular species in planet-forming
disks around young stars provide important constraints on photochemical disk
models and provide a baseline for calculating disk masses from measurements of
trace species. A knowledge of absolute abundances, those relative to molecular
hydrogen (H2), are challenging because of the weak rovibrational transition
ladder of H and the inability to spatially resolve different emission
components within the circumstellar environment. To address both of these
issues, we present new contemporaneous measurements of CO and H2 absorption
through the "warm molecular layer" of the protoplanetary disk around the
Classical T Tauri Star RW Aurigae A. We use a newly commissioned observing mode
of the Hubble Space Telescope-Cosmic Origins Spectrograph to detect warm H2
absorption in this region for the first time. An analysis of the emission and
absorption spectrum of RW Aur shows components from the accretion region near
the stellar photosphere, the molecular disk, and several outflow components.
The warm H2 and CO absorption lines are consistent with a disk origin. We model
the 1092-1117A spectrum of RW Aur to derive log10
N(H2)~=~19.90 at T(H2) ~=~440~+/-~39 K. The CO
~--~ bands observed from 1410-1520A are best fit by log10
N(CO)~=~16.1~ at T(CO) ~=~200 K.
Combining direct measurements of the HI, H2, and CO column densities, we find a
molecular fraction in the warm disk surface of ~>=~0.47 and derive a
molecular abundance ratio of CO/H2~=~1.6~x~10, both
consistent with canonical interstellar dense cloud values.Comment: ApJ - accepted. 13 pages, 8 figure
The [Ne III] Jet of DG Tau and its Ionization Scenarios
Forbidden neon emission from jets of low-mass young stars can be used to
probe the underlying high-energy processes in these systems. We analyze spectra
of the jet of DG Tau obtained with the Very Large Telescope/X-Shooter
spectrograph in 2010. [Ne III] 3869 is clearly detected in the
innermost 3" microjet and the outer knot located at 6".5. The velocity
structure of the inner microjet can be decomposed into the low-velocity
component (LVC) at km/s and the high-velocity component (HVC) at
km/s. Based on the observed [Ne III] flux and its spatial extent,
we suggest the origins of the [Ne III] emission regions and their relation with
known X-ray sources along the jet. The flares from the hard X-ray source close
to the star may be the main ionization source of the innermost microjet. The
fainter soft X-ray source at 0".2 from the star may provide sufficient heating
to help to sustain the ionization fraction against the recombination in the
flow. The outer knot may be reionized by shocks faster than 100 km/s such that
[Ne III] emission reappears and that the soft X-ray emission at 5".5 is
produced. Velocity decomposition of the archival Hubble Space Telescope spectra
obtained in 1999 shows that the HVC had been faster, with a velocity centroid
of km/s. Such a decrease in velocity may potentially be explained
by the expansion of the stellar magnetosphere, changing the truncation radius
and thus the launching speed of the jet. The energy released by magnetic
reconnections during relaxation of the transition can heat the gas up to
several tens of megakelvin and provide the explanation for on-source keV X-ray
flares that ionize the neon microjet
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