http://arxiv.org/abs/2002.04574
Time-domain studies of pre-main sequence stars have long been used to investigate star properties during their early evolutionary phases and to trace the evolution of circumstellar environments. Historically these studies have been confined to the nearest, low-density, star forming regions. We used the Wide Field Camera 3 on board of the Hubble Space Telescope to extend, for the first time, the study of pre-main sequence variability to one of the few young massive clusters in the Milky Way, Westerlund 2. Our analysis reveals that at least 1/3 of the intermediate and low-mass pre-main sequence stars in Westerlund 2 are variable. Based on the characteristics of their light curves, we classified ~11% of the variable stars as weak-line T-Tauri candidates, ~ 52% as classical T-Tauri candidates, ~ 5% as dippers and ~26% as bursters. In addition, we found that 2% of the stars below 6Mo (~6% of the variables) are eclipsing binaries, with orbital periods shorter than 80 days. The spatial distribution of the different populations of variable pre-main sequence stars suggests that stellar feedback and UV-radiation from massive stars play an important role on the evolution of circumstellar and planetary disks.
E. Sabbi, M. Gennaro, J. Anderson, et. al.
Wed, 12 Feb 20
3/58
Comments: 19 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication on ApJ
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