X-rays and regions of star formation: a combined ROSAT-HRI/near-to-mid IR study of the rho Oph dark cloud

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics

Scientific paper

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26 pages, 14 figures, 3 Tables. Accepted for publication in A&A

Scientific paper

We have obtained two deep exposures of the rho Oph cloud core region with the ROSAT HRI. The improved position accuracy (1"-6") with respect to previous recent X-ray observations (ROSAT PSPC, and ASCA) allows us to remove positional ambiguities for the detected sources. We also cross-correlate the X-ray positions with IR sources found in the ISO-ISOCAM survey of the same region at 6.7 and 14.3 \mum, in addition to sources known from ground-based observations, which are young stars. We find that there is no statistically significant difference between the X-ray luminosity functions of HRI-detected Class II and Class III sources, i.e., T Tauri stars with and without disks, confirming that the contribution of these disks to X-ray emission or absorption, must be small. Most of the sources are variable, and their variability is consistent with a solar-like (hence magnetic) flare origin. We use the information given both by the ISOCAM survey and by our HRI deep exposure to study the T Tauri star population of the rho Oph dense cores. We confirm that essentially all Class II and Class III sources are X-ray emitters, and that a strong correlation exists between their X-ray luminosity, L_X, and their stellar luminosity, L_*, with L_X/L_* ~ 1E-4. Most of the new ISOCAM Class II sources are not detected, however, which we explain by the fact that their X-ray luminosities ``predicted'' on the basis of this correlation are too faint to be detected by the HRI. We predict that ~40 unknown faint or embedded Class III sources remain to be discovered in X-rays in the HRI/ISOCAM overlapping area, down to a limit of L_X ~ 3 \times 1E28 erg/s. We show that the bulk of these unknown Class III sources should be made of low- to very low-mass stars. Prospects for future detections with XMM-Newton and Chandra are discussed.

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