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The origin of T tauri X-ray emission:: New insights from the Chandra Orion Ultradeep Project

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL SUPPLEMENT SERIES
Volume 160, Issue 2, Pages 401-422

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/432891

Keywords

open clusters and associations : individual (Orion Nebula Cluster); stars : activity; stars : magnetic fields; stars : pre-main-sequence; X-rays : stars

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The Chandra Orion Ultradeep Project ( COUP) provides the most comprehensive data set ever acquired on the X-ray emission of pre-main-sequence stars. In this paper, we study the nearly 600 X-ray sources that can be reliably identified with optically well-characterized T Tauri stars (TTSs) in the Orion Nebula Cluster. With a detection limit of L-X,L- min similar to 10(27.3) ergs s(-1) for lightly absorbed sources, we detect X-ray emission from more than 97% of the optically visible late-type ( spectral types F - M) cluster stars. This proves that there is no X-ray - quiet'' population of late-type stars with suppressed magnetic activity. We use this exceptional optical, infrared, and X-ray data set to study the dependencies of the X-ray properties on other stellar parameters. All TTSs with known rotation periods lie in the saturated or supersaturated regime of the relation between activity and Rossby numbers seen for main-sequence ( MS) stars, but the TTSs show a much larger scatter in X-ray activity than that seen for the MS stars. Strong near-linear relations between X-ray luminosities, bolometric luminosities, and mass are present. We also find that the fractional X-ray luminosity L-X/L-bol rises slowly with mass over the 0.1-2 M-. range. The plasma temperatures determined from the X-ray spectra of the TTSs are much hotter than in MS stars but seem to follow a general solar-stellar correlation between plasma temperature and activity level. The scatter about the relations between X-ray activity and stellar parameters is larger than the expected effects of X-ray variability, uncertainties in the variables, and unresolved binaries. This large scatter seems to be related to the influence of accretion on the X-ray emission. While the X-ray activity of the nonaccreting TTSs is consistent with that of rapidly rotating MS stars, the accreting stars are less X-ray active ( by a factor of similar to 2 - 3 on average) and produce much less well-defined correlations than the nonaccretors. We discuss possible reasons for the suppression of X-ray emission by accretion and the implications of our findings on long-standing questions related to the origin of the X-ray emission from young stars, considering in particular the location of the X-ray - emitting structures and inferences for pre-main-sequence magnetic dynamos.

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