1 / 15

The Lowest Mass Young Star Spectroscopic Binaries

The Lowest Mass Young Star Spectroscopic Binaries. Lisa Prato Lowell Observatory. Multiplicity in Star Formation -- Toronto -- May 17, 2007. What happens to young star spectroscopic multiplicity below 0.6 M  ?. PRE-MAIN-SEQUENCE DOUBLE-LINED SBS. Visible light SB2s. IR identified SB2s.

andradeb
Télécharger la présentation

The Lowest Mass Young Star Spectroscopic Binaries

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. The Lowest Mass Young Star Spectroscopic Binaries Lisa Prato Lowell Observatory Multiplicity in Star Formation -- Toronto -- May 17, 2007

  2. What happens to young star spectroscopic multiplicity below 0.6 M ? PRE-MAIN-SEQUENCE DOUBLE-LINED SBS Visible light SB2s IR identified SB2s Prato et al. (2002) • Desert of brown dwarf spectroscopic companions to higher mass stars (e.g., Marcy & Butler 2000) • Small fraction of low-mass wide separation visual binaries (e.g., Gizis et al. 2003; Burgasser et al. 2003) • Few planets around the lowest mass stars (e.g., Butler et al. 2004; Endl et al. 2006)

  3. ~ main-sequence  Primary Mass Separation 

  4. But need to add more dimensions: age (many), metallicity (Boden), secondary mass… • …and to take into account variations between diverse star-forming regions: • Binary fraction & separation distribution a function of stellar density (e.g., Simon 1997; Kraus & Hillenbrand 2007) Lada et al. (2000) Orion Serpens NASA/JPL-Caltech/L. Cieza (UT Austin)  Talk at 2:40pm today!

  5. Impact of surveys for VLM stellar and substellar young spectroscopic binaries: • Implications for stellar binary formation, substellar binary formation, and planet formation (e.g., Goodwin, Bate, Clarke, et al.) • Enables measurement of dynamical quantities such as mass ratios and eventually masses (e.g., Boden) • Quantitative tests of formation models • Quantitative SFR comparisons Mazeh et al. 2003

  6. “A comprehensive theory of star formation must account not only for the stellar/substellar initial mass function, but also the frequency and orbital distributions of binary systems.” Gizis et al. (2003)  Talk at 2:20pm today! “There are a lot of M stars out there…” Lada (2006), Endl et al. (2006), Boss (2006), Prato (MSF, 2007), et al.

  7. NIRSPEC+Keck2 / H-band /R=30,000 1 2 A tale of two Keck surveys: First large IR radial velocity survey of young stars (1) Young early M stars in Ophiuchus • Homogeneous sample (from Martín et al. 1998) • X-ray sources • Spectral types K7 - M4 • Selected from 4 regions of Ophiuchus • 31 targets - average H=9.8 mag (2) Young late M type objects in Taurus, TW Hya, and Ophiuchus • Sample from White & Basri; Jayawardhana et al.; Muzerolle et al. 2003; Briceño et al. 2002 • Spectral types M6 - M9 • Combination of non-accretors and accretors • 18 targets - average H=12.2 mag • Why IR observations? • M stars peak at >1m • Better chance of detecting spectra of faint, red 2ndaries

  8. 1” 1” Young, early M star results: Prato (2007) (130 AU) • Variety of multiple scales identified!

  9. 4/31 objects observed are spectroscopic binaries • Two double-lined systems, one located within a quadruple system • Two single-lined systems • At least one radial velocity variable candidate • Five subarcsecond visual binaries serendipitously discovered • Average vsini ~ 20 km/s (range <10 to >50 km/s) 8.0 3.5 %: • Overall spectroscopic multiplicity = 12± Consistent with higher mass young star + field star fractions

  10. Young, late M objects: Preliminary results • Three epochs’ observations of (almost) every target • Some of the highest SNR, high-resolution spectra to date • Similar M6—M9 homogeneity in features as high-resolution J-band data on field brown dwarfs (McLean et al. 2007)

  11. Analysis of third epoch of radial velocity shifts (∆vr) incomplete; results from initial analysis of first two epochs only: 4-13 months • Average ∆vr = –0.11±0.83 km/s (all 18 targets) Average ∆vr = –0.02±0.45 km/s (targets w/ ∆vr < 1 km/s) Precision ~ 0.5 km/s • Joergens (2006): M2.5 – M8  2/12 candidate RV variables  Talk at 4:30pm today! • Kurosawa et al. (2006): M5 – M8.5  4/17 candidate RV variables  Talk at 4:00pm today!

  12. Candidate RV Variables?? only 2 epochs! ~10-20 epochs on variable candidates Joergens (2006) Prato in prep. • Are chromospheres active enough to produce spots and thus faux radial velocity noise? “Young BDs of spectral type M are sufficiently warm to sustain an active corona.” (Grosso et al. 2006)

  13. Three interesting cases: KPNO-Tau 8 Broadest lines in sample • In general vsini’s systematically < than for early M stars: ave ~10 km/s  longer-lived disks as suggested by Bouy et al. (2007)? MHO 5 False hope from literature! White & Basri (2003): RV = 20.8±0.7 km/s Muzerolle et al. (2003): RV = 12.3±1.2 km/s NIRSPEC data: 4 epochs  ~16±0.5 km/s 2MASS 1207 Very low-mass companion at 55 AU: maximum induced RV only 0.15 km/s — nothing detected

  14. What to do next! • Observational biases a huge problem (IR vs. visible, etc) • Completeness of samples in different SFRs lacking • Need a lot of observations with optimized sampling • Plenty to do before the next workshop!

  15. Conclusions • Spectroscopic multiplicity of young, early and late M stars is important to study for comprehensive knowledge of parameter space and for assumption-free dynamical data • Early Ophiuchus M stars have spectroscopic multiplicity comparable to that of field stars and higher mass young stars • Late M (≥M6) sample yields 3 candidate SBs — need to be confirmed with multiple epoch observations! • Late M vsini’s systematically lower than for early Ms • Homogeneous, large samples within individual SFRs are important — if challenging — to compile This research was supported by the NASA KPDA fund & the NSF

More Related