4.6 Article

Circumstellar disks in the IC 348 cluster

Journal

ASTRONOMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 121, Issue 4, Pages 2065-2074

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/319951

Keywords

infrared radiation; open clusters and associations : individual (IC 348); stars : formation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

We report the results of the first sensitive L-band (3.4 mum) imaging survey of the young IC 348 cluster in Perseus. In conjunction with previously acquired JHK (1.25, 1.65, and 2.2 mum) observations, we use L-band data to obtain a census of the circumstellar disk population to m(K) = m(L) less than or equal to 120 in the central similar to 110 arcmin(2) region of the cluster. An analysis of the JHKL colors of 107 sources indicates that 65% +/- 8% of the cluster membership possesses (inner) circumstellar disks. This fraction is lower than those (86% +/- 8% and 80% +/- 7%) obtained from similar JHKL surveys of the younger NGC 2024 and Trapezium clusters, suggesting that the disk fraction in clusters decreases with cluster age. Sources with circumstellar disks in IC 348 have a median age of 0.9 Myr, while the diskless sources have a median age of 1.4 Myr, for a cluster distance of 320 pc. Although the difference in the median ages between the two populations is only marginally significant, our results suggest that over a timescale of similar to2-3 Myr more than a third of the disks in the IC 348 cluster disappear. Moreover, we find that at a very high confidence level the disk fraction is a function of spectral type. All stars earlier than G appear diskless, while stars with spectral types G and later have a disk fraction ranging between 50%-67%, with the latest-type stars having the higher disk fraction. This suggests that the disks around stars with spectral types G and earlier have evolved more rapidly than those with later spectral types. The L-band disk fraction for sources with similar ages in both IC 348 and Taurus is the same within the errors, suggesting that at least in clusters with no O stars the disk lifetime is independent of environment.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available