Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astronomy
Scientific paper
Aug 2000
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=2000apj...539..815j&link_type=abstract
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 539, Issue 2, pp. 815-833.
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Astronomy
87
Accretion, Accretion Disks, Stars: Circumstellar Matter, Stars: Activity, Stars: Pre-Main-Sequence
Scientific paper
We use our ultraviolet (UV) atlas of pre-main-sequence stars constructed from all useful, short-wavelength, low-resolution spectra in the International Ultraviolet Explorer (IUE) satellite Final Archive to analyze the short-wavelength UV properties of 49 T Tauri stars (TTSs). We compare the line and continuum fluxes in these TTSs with each other and with previously published parameters of these systems, including rotation rate, infrared excess, and mass accretion rate. The short-wavelength continuum in the classical TTSs (CTTSs) appears to originate in a ~10,000 K optically thick plasma, while in the naked TTSs (NTTSs-stars without dusty disks) the continuum appears to originate in the stellar atmosphere. We show that all of the TTSs in our sample lie in the regime of ``saturated'' magnetic activity due to their small Rossby numbers. However, while some of the TTSs show emission line surface fluxes consistent with this saturation level, many CTTSs show significantly stronger emission than predicted by saturation. In these stars, the emission line luminosity in the high ionization lines present in the spectrum between 1200 and 2000 Å correlates well with the mass accretion rate. Therefore, we conclude that the bulk of the short-wavelength emission seen in CTTSs results from accretion related processes and not from dynamo-driven magnetic activity. Using CTTSs with known mass accretion rates, we calibrate the relationship between M and LC IV to derive the mass accretion rate for some CTTSs which for various reasons have never had their mass accretion rates measured. Finally, several of the CTTSs show strong emission from molecular hydrogen. While emission from H2 cannot form in gas at a temperature of ~105 K, the strength of the molecular hydrogen emission is nevertheless well correlated with all the other emissions displayed in the IUE short-wavelength bandpass. This suggests that the H2 emission is in fact fluorescent emission pumped by the emission (likely Lyα) from hotter gas.
Johns-Krull Christopher M.
Linsky Jeffrey L.
Valenti Jeff A.
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