2015MNRAS.451.3371F


Query : 2015MNRAS.451.3371F

2015MNRAS.451.3371F - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 451, 3371-3384 (2015/August-3)

Mid-infrared spectroscopy of SVS13: silicates, quartz and SiC in a protoplanetary disc.

FUJIYOSHI T., WRIGHT C.M. and MOORE T.J.T.

Abstract (from CDS):

We present N-band (8-13 µm) spectroscopic observations of the low-mass, embedded pre-main-sequence close binary system SVS13. Absorption features are clearly detected which are attributable to amorphous silicates, crystalline forsterite, crystalline enstatite and annealed SiO2. Most intriguingly, a major component of the dust in the envelope or disc around SVS13 appears to be SiC, required to model adequately both the total intensity and polarization spectra. Silicon carbide is a species previously detected only in the spectra of C-rich evolved star atmospheres, wherein it is a dust condensate. It has not been unambiguously identified in the interstellar medium, and never before in a molecular cloud, let alone in close proximity to a forming star. Yet pre-solar grains of SiC have been identified in meteorites, possibly suggesting an interesting parallel between SVS13 and our own Solar-system evolution. The uniqueness of the spectrum suggests that we are either catching SVS13 in a short-lived evolutionary phase and/or that there is something special about SVS13 itself that makes it rare amongst young stars. We speculate on the physical origin of the respective dust species and why they are all simultaneously present towards SVS13. Two scenarios are presented: a disc-instability-induced fragmentation, with subsequent localized heating and orbital evolution first annealing initially amorphous silicates and then dispersing their crystalline products throughout a circumstellar disc; and a newly discovered shock-heating mechanism at the interface between the circumstellar and circumbinary discs providing the crystallization process. One or both of these mechanisms acting on carbon-rich grain material can also feasibly produce the SiC signature.

Abstract Copyright: © 2015 The Authors Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society (2015)

Journal keyword(s): binaries: close - circumstellar matter - stars: formation - stars: individual: SVS13 (V* V512 Per) - dust, extinction - infrared: stars

Simbad objects: 16

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Number of rows : 16
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 HD 15407 PM* 02 30 50.6559832920 +55 32 54.256925724   7.43 6.95     F5V 77 0
2 HD 20644 * 03 20 20.3620712067 +29 02 54.447584385 7.81 6.02 4.47 3.27 2.39 K3IIIaBa0.5 125 0
3 [RAC97] VLA 4a Rad 03 29 03.715 +31 16 04.14           ~ 30 0
4 [RAC97] VLA 4b Rad 03 29 03.740 +31 16 04.15           ~ 32 0
5 V* V512 Per Or* 03 29 03.7578170808 +31 16 03.947525688           M3.5 386 0
6 NAME HH 7-11 FIR 03 29 03.9 +31 16 06           ~ 351 0
7 NGC 1333 OpC 03 29 11.3 +31 18 36           ~ 1451 1
8 V* GG Tau Or* 04 32 30.3506925552 +17 31 40.494063144 14.84 14.78 13.40 11.54   M0e+M2.0e 737 1
9 [LHR84] GL 961W Y*O 06 34 37.4059331640 +04 12 42.469153272           ~ 18 0
10 RAFGL 961 Y*O 06 34 37.74144 +04 12 44.1972           O-rich 240 1
11 NAME RCW 57 IRS 1 IR 11 11 53.8 -61 18 25           ~ 7 0
12 IRAS 13481-6124 Y*O 13 51 37.85568 -61 39 07.5168           ~ 52 0
13 NAME Sgr A* X 17 45 40.03599 -29 00 28.1699           ~ 4395 3
14 HD 172555 PM* 18 45 26.9009806435 -64 52 16.534807985   4.967 4.767     A7V 278 0
15 RAFGL 2591 Y*O 20 29 24.8230 +40 11 19.590           ~ 622 0
16 [WBN74] NGC 7538 IRS 1 Y*O 23 13 45.318 +61 28 11.69           ~ 414 3

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