T Chamaeleontis is a T Tauri star
(a very young star which has not yet began to generate heat by hydrogen fusion, but which produces considerable energy through gravitational heating) estimated to be about 7 million years old, roughly 350 light
years from Earth in the constellation of Chamaeleontis. It is known to be
surrounded by two transition disks (disks of dust and gas surrounding very
young stars, thought to be associated with planet formation), with a possible
substellar companion (planet or brown dwarf) between the two. The inner disk is
known to extend from 0.13 to 0.17 AU from the star (i.e. 0.13-0.17 times the
distance at which the Earth orbits the Sun), while the outer disk has proved
harder to analyse, though it is thought either to comprise either a very
compact disk of material at about 40 AU, or a more diffuse disk reaching from
40-80 AU but with a very steep density gradient and most of its mass close to
its inner surface.
In a paper published in the
journal Astronomy & Astrophysics on 15 February 2015 a team of scientists led by Nuria Huélamo of the Centro de Astrobiología at the European Space Agency Center in Villanueva de la Cañada describe the results of a study of the outer disk of T
Chamaeleontis using the Atacama Large Millimeter Array in Chile, which looked
specifically for the molecules CO (carbon monoxide), 13CO (carbon
monoxide molecules in which the carbon molecule is the Carbon-13 isotope), CS
(carbon sulphite – check) and SO2 (sulphur dioxide). This is
possible because all molecules will absorb light energy at a range of
frequencies, but can only absorb so much before they must emit it again, which
occurs at a specific set of frequencies for each molecule (this is why sodium
lights are orange, neon lights are red and the sky is blue – the colour of
nitrogen), enabling astronomers and astrophysicists to look for specific
molecules in distant objects.
The CO, 13CO and CS
molecules were detected in the disk, but SO2 was not found. The CO
content of the disk appeared to stretch to a distance of 230 AU from the star,
considerably more than has been previously suggested, which the 13CO
molecule was found at distances of up to 170 AU and CS at 100 AU.
Integrated emission maps of the CO(3–2), ¹³CO(3–2), and the CS(7–6)
transitions (from left to right). The black contours represent the continuum
emission at 850 μm at 5, 15, 30, 45, 60, 75, 90, and 110σ where 1σ is 0.7 mJy
beam¯¹. We detect two emission bumps separated by 40 AU and an outer dust radius
of 79 AU. The white ellipses are the synthesized beams for the spectral
emission lines and the green ellipse is the synthesized beam for the continuum
map. The white dashed line in the left panel represents the axis where the position–velocity
has been obtained. Huélamo et al. (2015).
Huélamo et al. were also able to measure the velocity at which the
molecules were moving towards or away from the Earth by measuring the Doppler
shift on the light they emitted. This works because an object moving towards us
catches up a bit with light it emits (the speed of light is fixed), compressing
the light waves (making them closer together), which from our point of view
makes them slightly more blue (blue-shifting, which indicates an object is
coming towards us), while objects moving away from us stretch out the distance
between waves (making them further apart) and making them slightly more red
from our point of view (red shifting, which indicates an object is getting
further away). The CO component of the disk was found to be moving at between
-5.0 and 16.5 kilometres per second, the 13CO component at between
-3.0 and -15.0 kilometres per second and the CS component at between 0.0 and
11.0 kilometres per second.
Intensity-weighted mean velocity maps (first-order moment, 2σ cut for
CO(3–2) and 13CO(3–2), and 1.5σ cut for CS(7–6)). Huélamo et al. (2015).
From this Huélamo et al. calculate that the outer disk is
tilted at an angle of 67˚ from our perspective, and that it comprises an inner
dusty portion reaching from 40 to 80 AU, but with most of its mass inside of 50
AU from the star, and an outer gassy portion which reaches 230 AU from the
star. They further calculate that the rotation of this disk implies the star
has a mass equivalent to about 1.5 times that of the Sun and is about 10
million years old.
See also…
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Protoplanetary disks around Class I Protostars in the ρ Ophiuchi Star Forming Region.
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Searching for circumplanetary disks around LkCa 15.
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