A&A 397, 675-691 (2003)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20021544
A spectro-astrometric study of southern pre-main sequence stars
Binaries, outflows, and disc structure down to AU scales
M. Takami1, J. Bailey2 and A. Chrysostomou11 Department of Physical Sciences, University of Hertfordshire, Hatfield, Herts AL10 9AB, UK
2 Anglo-Australian Observatory, PO Box 296, Epping, NSW 1710, Australia
(Received 18 July 2002 / Accepted 22 October 2002)
Abstract
We present spectro-astrometric observations for 28 southern pre-main sequence (PMS) stars and investigate their circumstellar
environment down to AU scales. The structures detected in the "position spectra" include: (1) almost all the known binary
companions in our sample (Sz 68, Sz 41, HO Lup, VW Cha, S CrA, AS 205), (2) companion candidates which have not been detected
by infrared speckle techniques (T CrA, MWC 300), (3) monopolar and bipolar jets (AS 353A, CS Cha), (4) a combination of jets
and a bow shock (VV CrA), and (5) a combination of a jet and stellar companion (R CrA). Results in known binaries show that
this technique is capable of detecting binaries with separations down to ~10 milliarcsec.
Both components in each binary appear to have strikingly similar profiles in H
emission, indicating a similarity of circumstellar activity (mass accretion and/or a wind), and supporting the scenario of
core fragmentation for the mechanism of binary formation. The bipolar H
jet in CS Cha has a spatial scale of ~1.5 AU, similar to that previously observed in RU Lup, and likely be heated by a mechanism
other than shocks. From the spatial scale, velocity, and H
luminosity, we estimate the mean hydrogen density in the AU-scale bipolar flows to be
10
7 cm
-3. The bipolar geometry in these jets can be explained by the presence of a disc gap/hole at AU scales, which could be induced
by a gas-giant planet at the ice condensation radius.
Key words: accretion, accretion discs -- line: formation -- line: profiles -- stars: activity -- stars: evolution -- stars: pre-main-sequence
Offprint request: M. Takami, takami@star.herts.ac.uk
SIMBAD Objects
© ESO 2003

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