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Published July 2013 | Submitted + Published
Journal Article Open

Hot Gas Lines in T Tauri Stars

Abstract

For Classical T Tauri Stars (CTTSs), the resonance doublets of N V, Si IV, and C IV, as well as the He II 1640 Å line, trace hot gas flows and act as diagnostics of the accretion process. In this paper we assemble a large high-resolution, high-sensitivity data set of these lines in CTTSs and Weak T Tauri Stars (WTTSs). The sample comprises 35 stars: 1 Herbig Ae star, 28 CTTSs, and 6 WTTSs. We find that the C IV, Si IV, and N V lines in CTTSs all have similar shapes. We decompose the C IV and He II lines into broad and narrow Gaussian components (BC and NC). The most common (50%) C IV line morphology in CTTSs is that of a low-velocity NC together with a redshifted BC. For CTTSs, a strong BC is the result of the accretion process. The contribution fraction of the NC to the C IV line flux in CTTSs increases with accretion rate, from ~20% to up to ~80%. The velocity centroids of the BCs and NCs are such that V_(BC) ≳4 V_(NC), consistent with the predictions of the accretion shock model, in at most 12 out of 22 CTTSs. We do not find evidence of the post-shock becoming buried in the stellar photosphere due to the pressure of the accretion flow. The He II CTTSs lines are generally symmetric and narrow, with FWHM and redshifts comparable to those of WTTSs. They are less redshifted than the CTTSs C IV lines, by ~10 km s^(–1). The amount of flux in the BC of the He II line is small compared to that of the C IV line, and we show that this is consistent with models of the pre-shock column emission. Overall, the observations are consistent with the presence of multiple accretion columns with different densities or with accretion models that predict a slow-moving, low-density region in the periphery of the accretion column. For HN Tau A and RW Aur A, most of the C IV line is blueshifted suggesting that the C IV emission is produced by shocks within outflow jets. In our sample, the Herbig Ae star DX Cha is the only object for which we find a P-Cygni profile in the C IV line, which argues for the presence of a hot (10^5 K) wind. For the overall sample, the Si IV and N V line luminosities are correlated with the C IV line luminosities, although the relationship between Si IV and C IV shows large scatter about a linear relationship and suggests that TW Hya, V4046 Sgr, AA Tau, DF Tau, GM Aur, and V1190 Sco are silicon-poor, while CV Cha, DX Cha, RU Lup, and RW Aur may be silicon-rich.

Additional Information

© 2013 The American Astronomical Society. Received 2012 August 26; accepted 2013 April 11; published 2013 June 10. Based on observations made with the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. Support for this paper was provided by NASA through grant numbers HST-GO-11616.10 and HST-GO-12161.01 from the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI), which is operated by Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc. (AURA) under NASA contract NAS 5-26555. S.G.G. acknowledges support from the Science & Technology Facilities Council (STFC) via an Ernest Rutherford Fellowship [ST/J003255/1]. R.D.A. acknowledges support from the UK's Science & Technology Facilities Council (STFC) through an Advanced Fellowship (ST/G00711X/1). This research has made use of NASA's Astrophysics Data System Bibliographic Services and CHIANTI, a collaborative project involving George Mason University, the University of Michigan (USA) and the University of Cambridge (UK). We thank the team from HST GTO programs 11533 and 12036 (PI: J. Green) for allowing us early access to their data. Facility: HST (COS, STIS)

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Submitted - 1304.3746v1.pdf

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Created:
August 22, 2023
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October 24, 2023