4.6 Article

AN HST IMAGING SURVEY OF LOW-MASS STARS IN THE CHAMAELEON I STAR-FORMING REGION

Journal

ASTRONOMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 144, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-6256/144/3/83

Keywords

open clusters and associations: individual (Chamaeleon I); stars: luminosity function, mass function; stars: pre-main sequence

Funding

  1. NASA through Space Telescope Science Institute [11983]
  2. NASA [NAS 5-26555]

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We present new Hubble Space Telescope/WFPC2 observations of 20 fields centered around T Tauri stars in the Chamaeleon I star-forming region. Images have been obtained in the F631N ([O I] lambda 6300), F656N (H alpha), and F673N ([S II] lambda lambda 6716, 6731) narrow-band filters, plus the Johnson V-band equivalent F547M filter. We detect 31 T Tauri stars falling within our fields. We discuss the optical morphology of 10 sources showing evidence of either binarity, circumstellar material, or mass loss. We supplement our photometry with a compilation of optical, infrared, and submillimeter (sub-mm) data from the literature, together with new sub-mm data for three objects, to build the spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of 19 single sources. Using an SED model fitting tool, we self-consistently estimate a number of stellar and disk parameters, while mass accretion rates are directly derived from our Ha photometry. We find that bolometric luminosities derived from dereddened optical data tend to be underestimated in systems with high alpha(2-24) IR spectral index, suggesting that disks seen nearly edge-on may occasionally be interpreted as low-luminosity (and therefore more evolved) sources. On the other hand, the same alpha(2-24) IR spectral index, a tracer of the amount of dust in the warmer layers of the circumstellar disks, and the mass accretion rate appear to decay with the isochronal stellar age, suggesting that the observed age spread (similar or equal to 0.5-5 Myr) within the cluster is real. Our sample contains a few outliers that may have dissipated their circumstellar disks on a shorter timescale.

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