4.6 Article

THE SIZES OF THE NEAREST YOUNG STARS

Journal

ASTRONOMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 143, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-6256/143/6/134

Keywords

binaries: general; stars: fundamental parameters; stars: pre-main sequence; techniques: interferometric

Funding

  1. NSF/AAG [0908018]
  2. GSU
  3. Division Of Astronomical Sciences
  4. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [0908018, 1009643] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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We present moderate resolution (R similar to 3575) optical spectra of 19 known or suspected members of the AB Doradus and beta Pictoris Moving Groups, obtained with the DeVeny Spectrograph on the 72 inch Perkins telescope at Lowell Observatory. For four of five recently proposed members, signatures of youth such as Li I 6708 angstrom absorption and Ha emission further strengthen the case for youth and membership. The lack of detected lithium in the proposed beta Pic member TYC 2211-1309-1 implies that it is older than all other K-type members and weakens the case for membership. Effective temperatures are determined via line ratio analyses for the 11 F, G, and early-K stars observed, and via spectral comparisons for the eight late-K and M stars observed. We assemble updated candidate membership lists for these moving groups that account for known binarity. Currently, the AB Dor Moving Group contains 127 proposed members and the beta PicMovingGroup holds 77 proposed members. We then use temperature, luminosity, and distance estimates to predict angular diameters for these stars; the motivation is to identify stars that can be spatially resolved with long-baseline optical/infrared interferometers in order to improve age estimates for these groups and to constrain evolutionary models at young ages. Considering the portion of the sky accessible to northern hemisphere facilities (decl. > -30), six stars have diameters large enough to be spatially resolved (theta > 0.4 mas) with the CHARA Array, which currently has the world's longest baseline of 331 m; this subsample includes the low-mass M2.5 member of AB Dor, GJ 393, which is likely to still be pre-main sequence. For southern hemisphere facilities (decl. < + 30), 18 stars have diameters larger than this limiting size, including the low-mass debris disk star AU Mic (0.72 mas). However, the longest baselines of southern hemisphere interferometers (160 m) are only able to resolve the largest of these, the B6 star alpha Gru (1.17 mas); proposed long-baseline stations may alleviate the current limitations.

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