Near-Infrared Spectroscopic Study of AA Tau Logan R. Brown Erika L. Gibb Nathan X. Roth University...

20
Near-Infrared Spectroscopic Study of AA Tau Logan R. Brown Erika L. Gibb Nathan X. Roth University of Missouri – St. Louis

Transcript of Near-Infrared Spectroscopic Study of AA Tau Logan R. Brown Erika L. Gibb Nathan X. Roth University...

Page 1: Near-Infrared Spectroscopic Study of AA Tau Logan R. Brown Erika L. Gibb Nathan X. Roth University of Missouri – St. Louis.

Near-Infrared Spectroscopic Study

of AA TauLogan R. Brown

Erika L. Gibb

Nathan X. Roth

University of Missouri – St. Louis

Page 2: Near-Infrared Spectroscopic Study of AA Tau Logan R. Brown Erika L. Gibb Nathan X. Roth University of Missouri – St. Louis.

© Bill Saxton, NRAO / AUI / NSF

Page 3: Near-Infrared Spectroscopic Study of AA Tau Logan R. Brown Erika L. Gibb Nathan X. Roth University of Missouri – St. Louis.

Observations

High-resolution (λ/Δλ ∼ 25,000), near-infrared spectroscopic data obtained 2010 Feb 23 using NIRSPEC at Keck II (McLean et al. 1998)

Observations range from 2860 cm-1 to 3477 cm-1, chosen to cover many transitions of OH and Water

Reduced using a standard method: dark subtracted, flat fielded, cleaned of hot and dead pixels, spectrally and spatially straightened (Bonev 2005, DiSanti et al. 2001)

Telluric model fit to and subtracted from reduced spectra

Page 4: Near-Infrared Spectroscopic Study of AA Tau Logan R. Brown Erika L. Gibb Nathan X. Roth University of Missouri – St. Louis.

AA Tau

Fairly typical Classical T Tauri Star: K7 spectral type

Well-know, shows strong H-alpha emission and IR excesses indicating the presence of a gaseous and dusty accretion disc

Undergoes periodic eclipses caused by a warped inner disk structure

CO absorption studied in the 2 micron region

Water and prebiotic molecules observed in emission in the Mid-IR

Page 5: Near-Infrared Spectroscopic Study of AA Tau Logan R. Brown Erika L. Gibb Nathan X. Roth University of Missouri – St. Louis.

Comparison of the observed spectrum of AA Tauri to the combined model spectrum. All the unlabeled features are rotational transitions of H2O. (Carr & Najita 2008)

Page 6: Near-Infrared Spectroscopic Study of AA Tau Logan R. Brown Erika L. Gibb Nathan X. Roth University of Missouri – St. Louis.

AA Tau Inclination

Warped inner disc structure producing periodic eclipses

Period of eclipses used to calculate equatorial rotation velocity (8.22 ± 0.03 d)

Coupled with measured v sin i (11.3 ± 0.7 km s-1)

Calculated inclination of 70o ± 10o

(Donati et al. 2010)

Page 7: Near-Infrared Spectroscopic Study of AA Tau Logan R. Brown Erika L. Gibb Nathan X. Roth University of Missouri – St. Louis.

Red = 75o (traces top of dark lane), orange = 72o, yellow = 70o, blue = 68o inclination (traces bottom of dark lane. Derived i = 71o ± 1o. (Cox et al. 2013)

Page 8: Near-Infrared Spectroscopic Study of AA Tau Logan R. Brown Erika L. Gibb Nathan X. Roth University of Missouri – St. Louis.

Henning & Semenov 2013

Near-IR

Mid-IR

(Sub)millimeter

Page 9: Near-Infrared Spectroscopic Study of AA Tau Logan R. Brown Erika L. Gibb Nathan X. Roth University of Missouri – St. Louis.

Portion of the observed spectra

Error envelope plotted in grey, telluric model in pink

Page 10: Near-Infrared Spectroscopic Study of AA Tau Logan R. Brown Erika L. Gibb Nathan X. Roth University of Missouri – St. Louis.

Schematic representation of the line-of-sight geometry for the inner region of T Tauri star disk. (McJunkin et al. 2013)

Page 11: Near-Infrared Spectroscopic Study of AA Tau Logan R. Brown Erika L. Gibb Nathan X. Roth University of Missouri – St. Louis.

Portion of the observed spectra

Error envelope plotted in grey, telluric model in pink

Page 12: Near-Infrared Spectroscopic Study of AA Tau Logan R. Brown Erika L. Gibb Nathan X. Roth University of Missouri – St. Louis.

001-000 blue, 011-010 purple, 020-000 brown, 100-000 red, 110-010 green, OH tick marks

Single temperature, LTE model

Page 13: Near-Infrared Spectroscopic Study of AA Tau Logan R. Brown Erika L. Gibb Nathan X. Roth University of Missouri – St. Louis.

001-000 blue, 011-010 purple, 020-000 brown, 100-000 red, 110-010 green, OH tick marks

Single temperature, LTE model

Page 14: Near-Infrared Spectroscopic Study of AA Tau Logan R. Brown Erika L. Gibb Nathan X. Roth University of Missouri – St. Louis.

CO spectrum from HL Tau. The broad emission features result from hot CO gas near the star. The narrow absorption features that are superposed on these emission features have a lower rotational temperature indicating colder gas along the line of sight. (Brittain et al. 2005)

Page 15: Near-Infrared Spectroscopic Study of AA Tau Logan R. Brown Erika L. Gibb Nathan X. Roth University of Missouri – St. Louis.

Fractional abundance of H2O as a function of disk radius and height up to a radius of 10 AU (Walsh et al. 2010)

Page 16: Near-Infrared Spectroscopic Study of AA Tau Logan R. Brown Erika L. Gibb Nathan X. Roth University of Missouri – St. Louis.

Fractional abundance of H2O as a function of disk radius and height up to a radius of 10 AU (Walsh et al. 2010)

Page 17: Near-Infrared Spectroscopic Study of AA Tau Logan R. Brown Erika L. Gibb Nathan X. Roth University of Missouri – St. Louis.

See Brown et al. 2013 for discussion of modeling

Page 18: Near-Infrared Spectroscopic Study of AA Tau Logan R. Brown Erika L. Gibb Nathan X. Roth University of Missouri – St. Louis.
Page 19: Near-Infrared Spectroscopic Study of AA Tau Logan R. Brown Erika L. Gibb Nathan X. Roth University of Missouri – St. Louis.

Going Forward

Apply the developed emission line model with disk appropriate line profile

Simultaneously modeling emission and absorption

Finalize temperature and column density

Search for and identify other species such as HCN

Page 20: Near-Infrared Spectroscopic Study of AA Tau Logan R. Brown Erika L. Gibb Nathan X. Roth University of Missouri – St. Louis.

Acknowledgments

NASA Missouri Space Grant Consortium

NSF’s Stellar Astronomy program

The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009

NASA Exobiology and Evolutionary Biology program

W.M. Keck Observatory

The cultural role and reverence that the summit of Mauna Kea has with the indigenous Hawaiian community