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T Tauri Stars: An Overview

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Requires high energy photons, close to star (also seen in solar chromosphere) ... All similar to solar chromosphere, but actually due to extended atmosphere and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: T Tauri Stars: An Overview


1
T Tauri Stars An Overview
  • Colette Salyk
  • Ge132

2
What is a T Tauri star?
  • 1st Answer Observational
  • Hydrogen Balmer and Ca II H and K emission
  • Often emission of Fe I
  • Forbidden O I and S II emission
  • Strong Li absorption
  • IR -gt sub-mm excess
  • UV excess
  • Found in dusty regions- proper motions correlated
  • Off main sequence
  • Sometimes associated with disks and/or outflows

3
What is a T Tauri star?
  • 2nd Answer Theoretical
  • Low-mass (0.2-2 M? ) young (PMS) star
  • Class II
  • Often accompanied by disk of gas and dust
  • Active (star/disk interactions, fast rotation)
  • Sometimes releasing mass via polar outflows

4
IR Excess
  • Near-IR hot inner disk dust and gas
  • mid-IR -gt sub-mm dusty disk emission
  • Solar accretional energy

5
H? emission
  • n3-gtn2 transition
  • ? 6562.8 Å
  • Requires high energy photons, close to star
    (also seen in solar chromosphere)
  • Used to model accretion
  • Asymmetric shape
  • Doppler broadening gt100 km/s (supersonic)

6
Strong Li I Absorption
  • ? 6707.76 Å 2P3/2 -gt2S1/2
  • ? 6707.91 Å 2P1/2 -gt2S1/2
  • Li fragile, destroyed when in contact with high
    temperatures at base of convecting region of
    stars, so strong Li young
  • In TTSs, lognLi 3 similar to meteorites (in
    sun, lognLi 1 lognH12)

7
Forbidden O I S II emission
  • Very low emission probabilities-gtlow density
    environment
  • Probe outer regions of polar jets
  • Doppler broadened -gthigh speeds
  • Blueshifted (red part partially hidden)

8
Ca II H K, Fe I emission
  • Ca II H
  • ? 3968.5 Å
  • 2S1/2 lt-2P1/2
  • Ca II K
  • ? 3933.7 Å
  • 2S1/2 lt-2P3/2
  • Fe I
  • ? 4062.4 Å 3P1 lt-3S1
  • ? 4132.1 Å 3F2 lt- 3F3
  • Probably due to resonant fluorescence
  • All similar to solar chromosphere, but actually
    due to extended atmosphere and star/disk
    interactions

9
Implications / The Future
  • Initial Mass Function ( N(M) )
  • Effect of environment on formation
  • Mass of disk correlations? (environment, mass of
    parent star, age)
  • Young Star/Disk Interactions
  • Magnetic fields
  • Accretion
  • Mass loss
  • Evolution timescales
  • How long do outflows/disks last?
  • (How long do planets have to form?)
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