1 / 26

AN UNUSUAL T TAURI ABUNDANCE IN THE SOUTHERN HIGH MASS STAR FORMING REGION RCW 34

AN UNUSUAL T TAURI ABUNDANCE IN THE SOUTHERN HIGH MASS STAR FORMING REGION RCW 34. Lientjie de Villiers M.Sc. PROJECT SUPERVISOR: Prof. D.J. van der Walt. CONTENTS. Star-formation T Tauri star? Results: Colour-colour diagram Two-point correlation analysis

leora
Télécharger la présentation

AN UNUSUAL T TAURI ABUNDANCE IN THE SOUTHERN HIGH MASS STAR FORMING REGION RCW 34

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. AN UNUSUAL T TAURI ABUNDANCE IN THE SOUTHERN HIGH MASS STAR FORMING REGION RCW 34 Lientjie de Villiers M.Sc. PROJECT SUPERVISOR: Prof. D.J. van der Walt

  2. CONTENTS • Star-formation • T Tauri star? • Results: • Colour-colour diagram • Two-point correlation analysis • Colour-magnitude diagram • Colour Cut • K-band luminosity function • Conclusions • Future prospects & Relavance to Meerkat

  3. T Tauri Pre-main sequence star Pre-stellar core Molecular cloud Infrared protostar STAR FORMATION

  4. CLASS 0: Main accretion phase Age 104 yr M  0.5 Mo CLASS I: Late accretion phase Age ~105 yr M  0.1 Mo CLASS II: Optically thick disk Age ~106 yr Mdisk  0.01 Mo STAR FORMATION

  5. T TAURI STAR? • PMS stars near Molecular Clouds • < 2 Mo; 1-4 Myr • RTTauri > RMS for same mass  more luminous • No H-fusion; Powered by gravitational energy • Accretion Optical & UV excess emission • IR excess circumstellar disk • Magnetic field  starspots & excess X-ray & Radio emission Hartmann (1998); Appenzeller & Mundt (1989)

  6. RESULTS: Two-colour diagram • “Clustering” • 10 < Av < 15 • Not MS – too massive • CTT locus  lower boundary

  7. RESULTS: Two-colour diagram

  8. RESULTS: Two-colour diagram • Appears to be T Tauri stars on 2CD BUT background stars on coordinate plot. • VERIFY!! • Two-point correlation function • Colour-magnitude diagram • Slope of KLF

  9. RESULTS: Two-point correlation analysis Definition: Two-point correlation function (r12): the probability that points appear in each of the volume elements dV1 and dV2 at separation r12, • Poisson process:  = 0 • Significant clustering:  > 0 Numerical formula: 9Peebles (1976)

  10. RESULTS: Two-point correlation analysis • Significant clustering until 260 pixels (~ 2’) • Clustering shows for T Tauri’s too  spatial correlation

  11. RESULTS: Two-point correlation analysis • As for galaxies, with highly non-linear clustering: • TPCF ~ declining power-law for Taurus-Auriga (Gomez et al., 1993) • (r0 = correlation length). • Fitted a power-law on TPCF of RCW 34 too. • (5 pix binning i.s.o. 20 pix  reveal trends on small scales)

  12. RESULTS: Two-point correlation analysis • Twice-broken power- law for Taurus1 • 2 of the 3 parts seen for RCW 34 • Correspondence between slopes & transitions (knees) • 2nd “knee”: between random distribution of ass. members  primordial structure • 2nd knee  indicate Jeans length for ~1Mo core formation2  agree with T Tauri distribution 1 Krauss & Hillenbrand (2008), 2Larson (1995)

  13. RESULTS: Colour-Magnitude diagram • Similar to HR-diagram. Verify • T Tauri location.

  14. RESULTS: Colour-Magnitude diagram • Reddening too much for MS – must be PMO’s • T Tauri’s located where expected: M* < 2Mo

  15. RESULTS: Color-Cut • No control fields observed – needed for KLF. • Different method: colorcut4 • Take all stars bluer than a combined isochrone as a statistical “control field” 3 Harayama (2008)

  16. RESULTS: K-band Luminosity Function • KLF is given by • Slope of logarithmic KLF for RCW 34:  = 0.31 • About 50% of the members of the young cluster NGC 2264 are CTTs. • KLF slope of NGC 2264 is 0.32 ± 0.04 • Relation between CTT abundance and ? Need Spec. 4 Lada et al. (1993)

  17. RESULTS: KLF and age • NGC 2264 ~ 5 Myr4 serve as an estimate for the age of RCW 34, providing the apparent similar stellar populations in both clusters. • IC 348, showed a population of emission-line stars, with an age representing a star formation duration of 3Myr, centered on the cluster core5,6. • Herbig (1998) suggested that this very young cluster is superimposed on a more broadly distributed non- emission-line population that permeates the region of IC 348, with an age representing star formation of 1 − 10 Myr ago. 4 Lada et al. (1993), 5Herbig (1998), 6Luhman (1998)

  18. CONCLUSIONS • Two different stages of star formation in RCW 34: • 1st stage: • originated from a surrounding MC with dimensions > image frame that • lower mass star formation  the older population of T Tauri stars separated by Jeans length of dense cores. • T Tauri ages are around 1 - 4 Myr  parts of the cloud had already been destroyed  leave the T Tauri’s exposed • 2nd stage: • H II region appears to be part of the remaining core of the larger MC • star formation was triggered a 2nd time at a later stage •  formation of the central young massive star • shock formed by this exciting, high mass star  trigger for on-going star formation at the ionization front • young stars  sources that show a NIR excess on the 2CD. It appears as if star formation in RCW 34 is not coeval.

  19. FUTURE PROSPECTS • Confirm results with: • Spectroscopy. • Surrounding fields obtained from sky surveys (2MASS / VISTA?(deeper)): are cluster borders detected? • Analyze optical data  multi wavelength info on RCW 34. • Construct IMF – number of low mass stars expected? • Collaboration with Dr. Lucas – use Synthetic Besançon Stellar Population Models to model this field. Preliminary result: T Tauri cluster on 2CD is indeed due to a mixture of cluster members and field dwarfs.

  20. RELEVANCE TO MEERKAT • Confirm the nature of the possible T Tauri stars with the deeper survey of MeerKAT. • Radio-mapping of RCW 34’s molecular cloud  obtain its real shape and dimensions? • With better angular- & spatial resolution of SKA  distinguish between binary & multiple systems at small spatial scales – fill in the missing first part of TPCF power law. • ROSAT discovered 91 T Tauri stars in the vicinity of the Taurus- Auriga star-forming region. 17-29 of them were also detected by an 8.4 GHz VLA survey with a sensitivity limit of ~ 0.15 mJy7. 7Mamajek et al. (1996)

  21. THANK YOU! Ps. 147:4 “He determines and counts the number of the stars; He calls them all by their names”

  22. RCW 34 (G264.29+1.47) • Cometary shaped H II region3 kpc in the region of Vela R2 with AV = 4.2 mag1. • Ionization front with bright point source: 12th mag PMS O-starL = 5 x 105 L and R  23 R2. • Large IR excess  dust around exciting star. 1 Deharveng et al. (2005) & Heydari-Malayeri (1988); 2 Vittone et. Al. (1987)

  23. 10 ditherings of telescope METHOD DATA REDUCTION SIRIUS pipeline

  24. RESULTS CMD - COLORCUT • No control fields – needed for KLF. • Different method: colorcut (Harayama, 2008) • Combined isochrone: smooth turnover points between: 0.7 Myr PMS 1 Myr low-mass (1.2 Mo) PMS 2.5 Myr MS • Take all stars bluer than isochrone as “control field”

More Related