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Post Info TOPIC: Beta Pictoris Moving Group


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Posts: 131433
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AB Doradus Moving Group
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Title: Likely Members of the Beta Pictoris and AB Doradus Moving Groups in the North
Authors: Joshua E. Schlieder (1,2), Sebastien Lepine (3), Michal Simon (2)

We present first results from follow-up of targets in the northern hemisphere Beta Pictoris and AB Doradus moving group candidate list of Schlieder, Lepine, and Simon (2012). We obtained high-resolution, near-infrared spectra of 27 candidate members to measure their radial velocities and confirm consistent group kinematics. We identify 15 candidates with consistent predicted and measured radial velocities, perform analyses of their 6-dimensional (U,V,W,X,Y,Z) Galactic kinematics, and compare to known group member distributions. Based on these analyses, we propose that 7 Beta Pic and 8 AB Dor candidates are likely new group members. Four of the likely new Beta Pic stars are binaries; one a double lined spectroscopic system. Three of the proposed AB Dor stars are binaries. Counting all binary components, we propose 22 likely members of these young, moving groups. The majority of the proposed members are M2 to M5 dwarfs, the earliest being of type K2. We also present preliminary parameters for the two new spectroscopic binaries identified in the data, the proposed Beta Pic member and a rejected Beta Pic candidate. Our candidate selection and follow-up has thus far identified more than 40 low-mass, likely members of these two moving groups. These stars provide a new sample of nearby, young targets for studies of local star formation, disks and exoplanets via direct imaging, and astrophysics in the low-mass regime.

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L

Posts: 131433
Date:
Beta Pictoris Moving Group
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Title: Spitzer/MIPS Observations of Stars in the Beta Pictoris Moving Group
Authors: L. M. Rebull (SSC), K. R. Stapelfeldt (JPL), M. W. Werner (JPL), V. G. Mannings (SSC), C. Chen (NOAO), J. R. Stauffer (SSC), P. S. Smith (U.Arizona), I. Song (SSC), D. Hines (SSI), F. J. Low (U. Arizona)

We present Multiband Imaging Photometer for Spitzer (MIPS) observations at 24 and 70 microns for 30 stars, and at 160 microns for a subset of 12 stars, in the nearby (~30 pc), young (~12 Myr) Beta Pictoris Moving Group (BPMG). In several cases, the new MIPS measurements resolve source confusion and background contamination issues in the IRAS data for this sample. We find that 7 members have 24 micron excesses, implying a debris disk fraction of 23%, and that at least 11 have 70 micron excesses (disk fraction of >=37%). Five disks are detected at 160 microns (out of a biased sample of 12 stars observed), with a range of 160/70 flux ratios. The disk fraction at 24 and 70 microns, and the size of the excesses measured at each wavelength, are both consistent with an "inside-out" infrared excess decrease with time, wherein the shorter-wavelength excesses disappear before longer-wavelength excesses, and consistent with the overall decrease of infrared excess frequency with stellar age, as seen in Spitzer studies of other young stellar groups. Assuming that the infrared excesses are entirely due to circumstellar disks, we characterize the disk properties using simple models and fractional infrared luminosities. Optically thick disks, seen in the younger TW Hya and eta Cha associations, are entirely absent in the BPMG.
Additional flux density measurements at 24 and 70 microns are reported for nine Tucanae-Horologium Association member stars. Since this is <20% of the association membership, limited analysis on the complete disk fraction of this association is possible.

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