The Role of Evolutionary Age and Metallicity in the Formation of
Classical Be Circumstellar Disks II. Assessing the Evolutionary Nature of
Candidate Disk Systems
(Abridged version) We present the first detailed imaging polarization
observations of six SMC and six LMC clusters, known to have large populations
of B-type stars which exhibit excess H-alpha emission, to constrain the
evolutionary status of these stars and hence better establish links between the
onset of disk formation in classical Be stars and cluster age and/or
metallicity. The wavelength dependence of our intrinsic polarization data
provides a diagnostic of the dominant and any secondary polarigenic agents
present, enabling us to discriminate pure gas disk systems, i.e. classical Be
stars, from composite gas plus dust disk systems, i.e. Herbig Ae/Be or B[e]
stars. Our intrinsic polarization results, along with available near-IR color
information, strongly supports the suggestion of Wisniewski et al. that
classical Be stars are present in clusters of age 5-8 Myr, and contradict
assertions that the Be phenomenon only develops in the second half of a B
star's main sequence lifetime, i.e. no earlier than 10 Myr.
Comparing the polarimetric properties of our dataset to a similar survey of
Galactic classical Be stars, we find that the prevalence of polarimetric Balmer
jump signatures decreases with metallicity. We speculate that these results
might indicate that either it is more difficult to form large disk systems in
low metallicity environments, or that the average disk temperature is higher in
these low metallicity environments. We have characterized the polarimetric
signatures of all candidate Be stars in our data sample and find ~25% are
unlikely to arise from true classical Be star-disk systems.Comment: 30 pages, accepted by ApJ, emulateapj5 forma