2019A&A...632A..46V


Query : 2019A&A...632A..46V

2019A&A...632A..46V - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 632A, 46-46 (2019/12-0)

X-shooter spectroscopy of young stars with disks. The TW Hydrae association as a probe of the final stages of disk accretion.

VENUTI L., STELZER B., ALCALA J.M., MANARA C.F., FRASCA A., JAYAWARDHANA R., ANTONIUCCI S., ARGIROFFI C., NATTA A., NISINI B., RANDICH S. and SCHOLZ A.

Abstract (from CDS):


Context. Measurements of the fraction of disk-bearing stars in clusters as a function of age indicate protoplanetary disk lifetimes ≤10Myr. However, our knowledge of the time evolution of mass accretion in young stars over the disk lifespans is subject to many uncertainties, especially at the lowest stellar masses (M*).
Aims. We investigate ongoing accretion activity in young stars in the TW Hydrae association (TWA). The age of the association (∼8-10Myr) renders it an ideal target for probing the final stages of disk accretion, and its proximity (∼50pc) enables a detailed assessment of stellar and accretion properties down to brown dwarf masses.
Methods. Our sample comprises eleven TWA members with infrared excess, amounting to 85% of the total TWA population with disks. Our targets span spectral types between M0 and M9, and masses between 0.58M and 0.02M. We employed homogeneous spectroscopic data from 300nm to 2500nm, obtained synoptically with the X-shooter spectrograph, to derive the individual extinction, stellar parameters, and accretion parameters for each object simultaneously. We then examined the luminosity of Balmer lines and forbidden emission lines to probe the physics of the star-disk interaction environment.
Results. Disk-bearing stars represent around 24% of the total TWA population. We detected signatures of ongoing accretion for 70% of our TWA targets for which accurate measurements of the stellar parameters could be derived. This implies a fraction of accretors between 13-17% across the entire TWA (that accounts for the disk-bearing and potentially accreting members not included in our survey). The spectral emission associated with these stars reveals a more evolved stage of these accretors compared to younger PMS populations studied with the same instrument and analysis techniques (e.g., Lupus): first, a large fraction (∼50%) exhibit nearly symmetric, narrow Hα line profiles; second, over 80% of them exhibit Balmer decrements that are consistent with moderate accretion activity and optically thin emission; third, less than a third exhibit forbidden line emission in [O I] 6300 Å, which is indicative of winds and outflows activity; and fourth, only one sixth exhibit signatures of collimated jets. However, the distribution in accretion rates (dMacc/dt) derived for the TWA sample closely follows that of younger regions (Lupus, Chamaeleon I, σ Orionis) over the mass range of overlap (M*∼0.1-0.3M). An overall correlation between dMacc/dt and M* is detected and best reproduced by the function dMacc/dt∝M*2.1±0.5. Conclusion. At least in the lowest M* regimes, stars that still retain a disk at ages ∼8-10Myr are found to exhibit statistically similar, albeit moderate, accretion levels as those measured around younger objects. This "slow" dMacc/dt evolution that is apparent at the lowest masses may be associated with longer evolutionary timescales of disks around low-mass stars, which is suggested by the mass-dependent disk fractions reported in the literature within individual clusters.

Abstract Copyright: © ESO 2019

Journal keyword(s): accretion - accretion disks - techniques: spectroscopic - stars: low-mass - stars: pre-main sequence - open clusters and associations: individual: TWA

VizieR on-line data: <Available at CDS (J/A+A/632/A46): list.dat fits/*>

Simbad objects: 42

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Number of rows : 42
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 NAME Taurus Complex SFR 04 41.0 +25 52           ~ 4416 0
2 NAME Orion Nebula Cluster OpC 05 35.0 -05 29           ~ 2331 0
3 NAME sig Ori Cluster OpC 05 38 42 -02 36.0           ~ 567 0
4 NAME Orion Molecular Cloud MoC 05 56 -01.8           ~ 1098 1
5 NGC 2264 OpC 06 40 52.1 +09 52 37           ~ 1793 0
6 NAME eta Cha Association OpC 08 42 32.9 -78 57 47           ~ 363 0
7 TWA 22 LXB 10 17 26.8927745040 -53 54 26.387425044   15.69 13.96 13.72   M5 83 0
8 V* BX Ant TT* 10 18 28.6987521312 -31 50 02.830052544   13.39 11.454 11.382 9.325 M0Ve 119 0
9 V* CE Ant TT* 10 42 30.1018928760 -33 40 16.229805204   12.21 10.91   9.10 M2Ve 209 1
10 V* TW Hya TT* 11 01 51.9053285064 -34 42 17.033218380   11.94 10.50 10.626 9.18 K6Ve 1892 1
11 NAME TW Hya Association As* 11 01.9 -34 42           ~ 942 0
12 TWA 28 LM* 11 02 09.8378779824 -34 30 35.562199176     21.46 19.14 17.90 M8.3 70 0
13 NAME Cha 1 MoC 11 06 48 -77 18.0           ~ 1154 1
14 CD-29 8887 TT* 11 09 13.7928873024 -30 01 39.968872752   12.95 11.119 10.642 8.875 M2Ve 128 0
15 TWA 3B TT* 11 10 27.8406509184 -37 31 52.748684904   14.59 13.70   8.86 M4Ve 56 0
16 TWA 3 ** 11 10 27.894072 -37 31 51.96612   13.53 12.05 11.61 9.29 M4Ve+M4Ve 211 0
17 TWA 3A TT* 11 10 27.9121410480 -37 31 51.535547940   14.04 12.57   9.10 M4Ve 209 0
18 V* V1215 Cen TT* 11 13 26.2208680752 -45 23 42.720964188     12.478   10.483 K8IVe 82 0
19 CD-34 7390A TT* 11 21 17.2193334624 -34 46 45.503251608   12.88 11.46 11.43 9.57 M1Ve 100 0
20 CD-34 7390B TT* 11 21 17.4430606440 -34 46 49.775810700   13.43 11.96 11.31 9.88 M1Ve 70 0
21 TWA 30B LM* 11 32 18.2189779176 -30 18 31.643286444         16.68 M4 40 0
22 TWA 30 Y*O 11 32 18.3115839696 -30 19 51.857770620       14.205 11.30 M5V 70 0
23 CD-26 8623B TT* 11 32 41.1733260768 -26 52 09.107765976   16.70 15.22 13.68 11.76 M5.5 75 0
24 CD-26 8623 TT* 11 32 41.2658824800 -26 51 55.961893800   13.69 12.23 11.14 9.637 M3Ve 105 0
25 TWA 26 LM* 11 39 51.1378374696 -31 59 21.443660124         15.83 M8e 108 0
26 CD-36 7429B TT* 11 48 23.7348035520 -37 28 48.520414812   15.43 14.00   11.45 M1V 81 0
27 CD-36 7429A TT* 11 48 24.2227406904 -37 28 49.114270524   12.54 11.17 10.92 9.552 K5V 127 0
28 NAME Chamaeleon Region SFR 11 55 -78.0           ~ 806 0
29 TWA 31 PM* 12 07 10.8883274664 -32 30 53.755860744   18.5   16.4   M4.2 26 0
30 TWA 27 LM* 12 07 33.4675524840 -39 32 54.016625184     19.95 17.99 15.88 M8IVe 338 0
31 TWA 40 BD* 12 07 48.3532260288 -39 00 04.484586600           L1 20 0
32 V* V1249 Cen TT* 12 15 30.7203201048 -39 48 42.606684144   13.09 11.160 10.919 9.50 M0.5 116 0
33 NAME Lower Centaurus Crux As* 12 19 -57.1           ~ 477 1
34 TWA 32 ** 12 26 51.366576 -33 16 12.54324   17.21 16.00 15.73   M6.3 32 0
35 V* V1250 Cen TT* 12 34 20.4720080040 -48 15 19.545583716   13.3 12.2   11.80 M3 37 0
36 V* V1251 Cen TT* 12 34 20.6481372456 -48 15 13.531352148   13.3 12.2   11.90 M3.5 44 0
37 TWA 29 LM* 12 45 14.1607780560 -44 29 07.728263340         18.0 M9.5p 48 0
38 2MASS J12474428-3816464 LM* 12 47 44.2881296304 -38 16 46.423450812           M9 12 0
39 NAME beta Pic Moving Group MGr 14 30 -42.0           ~ 774 0
40 NAME Lupus Complex SFR 16 03 -38.1           ~ 720 0
41 NAME Upper Sco Association As* 16 12 -23.4           ~ 1369 1
42 NAME Ophiuchus Molecular Cloud SFR 16 28 06 -24 32.5           ~ 3631 1

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