4.6 Article

The T Tauri star population of the young cluster NGC 2264

Journal

ASTRONOMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 129, Issue 2, Pages 829-855

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1086/426326

Keywords

accretion, accretion disks; open clusters and associations : individual (NGC 2264); stars : formation; stars : pre-main-sequence; stars : rotation

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An Ha emission survey of the young cluster NGC 2264 in the Mon OB I association resulted in the detection of 490 Ha emission stars in a 25' x 40' field approximately centered between the 07 V multiple star S Mon and the Cone Nebula. The survey was carried out with the wide-field grism spectrograph (WFGS) on the University of Hawaii 2.2 m telescope on Mauna Kea. X-ray observations made with the European Photon Imaging Camera on board the European Space Agency's XMM-Newton satellite observatory will be discussed in a subsequent paper. Optical (BVRCIC) photometry was obtained for selected fields to supplement similar data from the literature. Spectra covering the 6000-8000 Angstrom region at a resolution of R similar to 3000 (adequate for the determination of Li I lambda6708 line strengths) were obtained for 150 Halpha and X-ray emission sources with the Gemini Multi-Object Spectrograph. Near-infrared spectra (1-2.5 mum) of a number of T Tauri stars (TTSs), X-ray sources, and LHalpha25 (W90) were also obtained using SpeX on the Infrared Telescope Facility. Ages and masses for the Ha emitters were inferred from the isochrones and evolutionary tracks of D'Antona & Mazzitelli. The median age for the TTS population is about 1.1 Myr, but a considerable dispersion, from 0.1 to 5 Myr, exists for individual objects. Several fields in the cluster were observed with the WFGS on more than one occasion, permitting an examination of Ha variability over long baselines in time. About 90% of the classical T Tauri stars (CTTSs) showed changes in W(Ha) of at least 10%, while 57% varied at levels of 50% or more. No evidence was found for a significant pool of dormant Ha emitters. Summing the masses of the TTSs and the OB stellar population of NGC 2264, a lower limit for the total stellar mass content of the cluster is about 430 MD. This is less than 1% of the total mass of the atomic and molecular gas believed to be associated with NGC 2264. Evidence for hierarchical structure within the cluster is suggested by the spatial distribution of TTSs. Four concentrations of Ha emitters are evident: two near S Mon and two near the Cone Nebula. The median age of the TTSs in the immediate vicinity of S Mon was found to be greater than that of the TTSs near Allen's infrared source (IRS-1), but a significant dispersion is present. From the rotational data of Lamm et al. and Makidon et al. 241 of the TTSs are periodic variables, 150 weak-line T Tauri stars (WTTSs) and 91 CTTSs, while 123 stars are irregular variables (30 WTTSs and 93 CTTSs). A weak-to-moderate positive correlation is found between H - K color and Pot for the CTTSs, in the sense that stars having longer periods tend to have larger H - K colors. A similar positive correlation is found between L-Halpha and P-rot among the CTTSs. No statistically significant correlation is found between P-rot and theoretical age or between P-rot and L-x. Other topics discussed include the fraction of Ha emitters that are WTTSs, f(WTTS) = N(WTTS)/N(TTS), for clusters of different ages; the relative detectability of Halpha emission using WFGS and narrowband filter imaging techniques; and the correlation of W(Li I) with T, age, H - K color, and W(Ha).

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