2007A&A...475..607G


Query : 2007A&A...475..607G

2007A&A...475..607G - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 475, 607-617 (2007/11-4)

Observation of enhanced X-ray emission from the CTTS AA Tauri during one transit of an accretion funnel flow.

GROSSO N., BOUVIER J., MONTMERLE T., FERNANDEZ M., GRANKIN K. and ZAPATERO OSORIO M.R.

Abstract (from CDS):

Classical T Tauri stars are young solar-type stars accreting material from their circumstellar disks. Thanks to a favorable inclination of the system, the classical T Tauri star AA Tau exhibits periodic optical eclipses as the warped inner disk edge occults the stellar photosphere. We intend to observe the X-ray and UV emission of AA Tau during the optical eclipses with the aim of localizing these emitting regions on the star. AA Tau was observed for about 5h per XMM-Newton orbit (2 days) over 8 successive orbits, which covers two optical eclipse periods (8.22 days). The XMM-Newton optical/UV monitor simultaneously provided UV photometry (UVW2 filter at 206nm) with a ∼15min sampling rate. Some V-band photometry was also obtained from the ground during this period in order to determine the dates of the eclipses. Two X-ray and UV measurements were secured close to the center of the eclipse (ΔV∼1.5mag). The UV flux is the highest just before the eclipse starts and the lowest towards the end of it. UV flux variations amount to a few 0.1mag on a timescale of a few hours and up to 1ag on a timescale of a week, none of which are correlated with the X-ray flux. We model it with a weekly modulation (inner disk eclipse), plus a daily modulation, which suggests a non-steady accretion, but needs a longer observation to be confirmed. No such eclipses are detected in X-rays. Within each 5h-long observation, AA Tau has a nearly constant X-ray count rate. On a timescale of days to weeks, the X-ray flux varies by a factor of 2-8, except for one measurement where the X-ray count rate was nearly 50 times higher than the minimum observed level even though photoelectric absorption was the highest at this phase, and the plasma temperature reached 60MK, i.e. a factor of 2-3 higher than in the other observations. This X-ray event, observed close to the center of the optical eclipse, is interpreted as an X-ray flare. We explain the variable column density with the low-density accretion funnel flows blanketing the magnetosphere. The lack of X-ray eclipses indicates that X-ray emitting regions are located at high latitudes. Furthermore, the occurrence of a strong X-ray flare near the center of the optical eclipse suggests that the magnetically active areas are closely associated with the base of the high-density accretion funnel flow. We speculate that the impact of this free-falling accretion flow onto the strong magnetic field of the stellar corona may boost the X-ray emission.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): stars: individual: AA Tauri - stars: pre-main sequence - X-rays: stars - accretion, accretion disks

Simbad objects: 9

goto Full paper

goto View the references in ADS

Number of rows : 9
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 Haro 6-13 Or* 04 32 15.4174258632 +24 28 59.577717108 19.22   17.7     M0 214 1
2 1WGA J0434.9+2428 X 04 34 55.4 +24 28 26           ~ 1 0
3 V* AA Tau Or* 04 34 55.4201902392 +24 28 53.033624580 13.14 13.34 12.20 12.03   K5Ve 723 0
4 NAME Taurus Complex SFR 04 41.0 +25 52           ~ 4414 0
5 NAME Orion Nebula Cluster OpC 05 35.0 -05 29           ~ 2330 0
6 2MASS J05350843-0523049 Y*O 05 35 08.4354369888 -05 23 04.930022364         17.040 M7 21 0
7 M 42 HII 05 35 17 -05 23.4           ~ 4073 0
8 COUP 874 * 05 35 17.406 -05 22 03.90           ~ 18 0
9 V* V1513 Ori Or* 05 35 18.3064330248 -05 31 42.263219388   20.480 19.459 17.56 16.812 K0-K2 27 0

To bookmark this query, right click on this link: simbad:objects in 2007A&A...475..607G and select 'bookmark this link' or equivalent in the popup menu