Spitzer observations of the Orion OB1 association: disk census in the low mass stars
Jesús Hernández(Univ. of Michigan/CIDA), Nuria Calvet (Univ. of Michigan), César Briceño (CIDA), Lee Hartmann (Univ. of Michigan), A. Katherina Vivas (CIDA), James Muzerolle (Steward Observatory), J. Downes (UCV/CIDA), Robert Gutermuth (CfA), Thomas Megeath (University of Toledo), Lori Allen (CfA)
Abstract
We present new
Spitzer Space Telescope observations of two fields
in the Orion OB1 association. We report here IRAC/MIPS observations
for 115 confirmed members and 41 photometric candidates of the ~10 Myr
25 Orionis aggregate in the OB1a subassociation, and 106 confirmed members
and 65 photometric candidates of the 5 Myr region located in the OB1b subassociation.
The 25 Orionis aggregate shows a disk frequency of 6% while the field
on the OB1b subassociation shows a disk frequency of 13%.
Combining IRAC, MIPS and 2MASS photometry we place stars bearing disks
in several classes: stars with optically thick disks (class II systems),
stars with an inner transitional disks (transitional disk candidates)
and stars with ``evolved disks''; the last exhibit smaller IRAC/MIPS
excesses than class II systems. In all, we identify 1 transitional
disk candidate in the 25 Orionis aggregate and 3 in the OB1b field;
this represents ~10% of the disk bearing stars, indicating that
the transitional disk phase can be relatively fast.
We find that the frequency of disks is a function
of the stellar mass, suggesting a maximum around stars with spectral type M0.
Comparing the infrared excess in the IRAC bands
among several stellar groups we find that inner disk emission
decays with stellar age, showing a correlation with the respective
disk frequencies. The disk emission at the IRAC and MIPS bands
in several stellar groups indicates that disk dissipation
takes place faster in the inner region of the disks. Comparison with models
of irradiated accretion disks, computed with several degrees of settling, suggests
that the decrease in the overall accretion rate observed in young stellar groups
is not sufficient to explain the weak disk emission observed in the
IRAC bands for disk bearing stars with ages 5 Myr or older;
larger degrees of dust settling are neccesary to explain these objects.
Paper alread published. See Astrophysical Journal version at
PublicationsList
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CesarBriceno - 04 Oct 2007