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Multiplicity in the Aquila Star-Forming Region

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Presentation on theme: "Multiplicity in the Aquila Star-Forming Region"— Presentation transcript:

1 Multiplicity in the Aquila Star-Forming Region
Collaborators: Lisa Prato, Ian McLean, Quinn Konopacky, Andrea Ghez, Tom Ghez Published in Rice et al and Prato et al. in press (Handbook of Star Forming Regions edited by Bo Reipurth) Selection of the sample, which I describe in a moment, was motivated by these objects, AS 353A and B, one or both of which excite this Herbig-Haro object HH 32. The selection of the sample and the goals of this project were motivated by this intriguing system. Hubble Heritage IMage Emily L. Rice, UCLA Multiplicity in Star Formation Workshop May 17, 2007

2 Aquila SFR is eastern portion of Aquila Rift between Serpens, Vulpelcula & Scutum in the Galactic plane Left plot: why Aquila hasn’t been studied Right plot: why Aquila SHOULD be studied: ample material for star formation, very few stars known Stars from left to right: HBC 294 (lower l), Par 21 (more distant), AS 353, HBC 684, HBC 681/682/683 Aquila Rift in Visible Light A. Mellinger (de Cicco 1999, Prato et al. in press) Aquila Rift in Integrated 12CO T. Dame (Prato et al. in press) Molecular mass: 1.1 to 2.7 x 105 Msun (Dame & Thaddeus 1985, Dame et al. 1987, Straizys et al. 2003) Virial mass: 2.6 x 105 Msun (Dame & Thaddeus 1985) Many large & small dark clouds and molecular cores Few known young stars

3 Radial velocity survey of known Aquila stars (Rice et al. 2006)
HBC 682 HBC 681 HBC 683 FG Aql/G3 High-resolution H-band spectra of nine systems (seven multi-epoch) using NIRSPEC on Keck II Goals: Search for spectroscopic binaries Measure radial velocity to strengthen membership determine other stellar properties to confirm youth & membership The sample was chosen based on low mass, H alpha emission, and spatial proximity to AS The original sample was seven stars, then grew to nine through the discovery of a visual binary (HBC 682) and the accidental observation of FG Aql/G3. This 2MASS image shows a field containing five of the nine sample stars. Results: IR spectral types Radial velocity & variability Rad. Vel. Dispersion ~2 km/s H-band 2MASS image (40” x 40”)

4 Results: HBC 682 identified as a triple system
K A (vsini) B 1” NIRC2 (Keck II) ~1” visual binary HBC 682A is radial velocity variable over five epochs (2.25 yr baseline)

5 Results: possible low-mass companion to HBC 681
K 1” A. Ghez Plug Quinn’s talk!!! NIRC2 H and K images taken over a year apart Flux ratio ~15 in both bands H-K ~ 0.35: consistent with late-M spectral type (possible Brown Dwarf if real companion) Need J for NIR colors, common proper motion

6 AS 353 is a known triple system
Mixed classical/weak-lined T Tauri system B is subarcsecond binary (Tokunaga et al. 2004) Age ≤ few million years (Prato et al. 2003; Rice et al. 2006) Distance ~ 200±30 parsec (Rice et al. 2006) A has rich emission line spectrum in optical (Eislöffel et al. 1990) & heavily veiled photospheric absorption lines in near-IR (Rice et al. 2006) This is a mixed T Tauri system – the primary is a classical T Tauri with strong H alpha emission (150 ang.) and infrared excess, while the secondary, which has recently been resolved into a subarcsecond binary system, is a weak-lined T Tauri star. The age and the distance are still somewhat uncertain but are probably larger than the well-studied Taurus and Ophiucus star forming regions. L’ image of AS 353 from Tokunaga et al. (2004)

7 Multi-epoch H-band spectra of AS 353 A from Rice et al. 2006
#’s correspond to line IDs in Rice et al. 2006 Orange lines are Fe, others are S, Ti, Ni, C, Si, OH Radial velocity is non-variable over three epochs (2 yr baseline) Radial velocity and common proper motion (Herbig & Jones 1983) indicate it is a bound pair with AS 353B

8 HBC 294 is a known is binary K
1” 0.52” visual binary, PA=17º (Ageorges et al. 1994) Optical and NIR emission lines in unresolved spectrum Near-, mid-, and far-IR excesses suggest dust disk Truncated disks suggested by low IRAS 100 m flux

9 Confirmed Aquila Members have a High Multiplicity Fraction
Object HBC Sp. Type Multiplicity Reference AS 353A 292 K5 Single Rice et al. 2006 AS 353B 685 M0 Binary Tokunaga et al. 2004 V536 Aql 294 K7 Ageorges et al. 1994 FG Aql/G1 681 Binary? unpublished FG Aql/G2 682 Triple FG Aql/G3 FH Aql 683 IRAS 684 Single? As many as 13 objects in 7 systems!

10 Nebulosity around HBC 684 40” x 40” 2MASS H band Br continuum
(A. Weinberger) It is apparent from these images that there is some nebulosity around this unusual emission-line object. We didn’t see this emission when we imaged it the slit-viewing camera on NIRSPEC. This is an interesting object that certainly warrants further study. (references in SIMBAD) N E 5’ x 5’ POSS II IR

11 Unexplained emission lines in spectrum of HBC 684 from Rice et al. 2006
Line ratios match K5 standard spectrum Weak Hydrogen emission UT 30 April 2007 spectrum still shows emission lines Possible binary from NIRC speckle observations Sep = , 30 mas, below diffraction limit of Keck telescope PA = Flux Ratio =

12 Conclusions Aquila is a promising laboratory for the study of low-mass star formation Of seven confirmed Aquila systems, there are: Two triples (AS 353 & HBC 682) One q~1 binary (HBC 294) One possible low-mass companion (HBC 681) Up to 13 objects total! Multiplicity likely similar to Taurus for known members Follow-up work: H imaging of region to find more candidate members (ongoing) high-resolution spectra of candidate members


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