6533b853fe1ef96bd12acc0d
RESEARCH PRODUCT
A statistical analysis of X-ray variability in pre-main sequence objects of the Taurus Molecular Cloud
Kevin BriggsL. ScelsiIgnazio PillitteriIgnazio PillitteriEttore FlaccomioBeate StelzerMarc AudardGiuseppina MicelaManuel Guedelsubject
Physics010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesMolecular cloudAstrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical PhenomenaAstrophysics (astro-ph)FOS: Physical sciencesAstronomy and AstrophysicsAstrophysicsStar (graph theory)Astrophysics01 natural scienceslaw.inventionStarsSpace and Planetary Sciencelaw0103 physical sciencesOrion NebulaCluster (physics)Range (statistics)Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics010303 astronomy & astrophysicsAstrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics0105 earth and related environmental sciencesFlareSequence (medicine)description
This work is part of a systematic X-ray survey of the Taurus star forming complex with XMM-Newton. We study the time series of all X-ray sources associated with Taurus members, to statistically characterize their X-ray variability, and compare the results to those for pre-main sequence stars in the Orion Nebula Cluster and to expectations arising from a model where all the X-ray emission is the result of a large number of stochastically occurring flares. We find that roughly half of the detected X-ray sources show variability above our sensitivity limit, and in ~ 26 % of the cases this variability is recognized as flares. Variability is more frequently detected at hard than at soft energies. The variability statistics of cTTS and wTTS are undistinguishable, suggesting a common (coronal) origin for their X-ray emission. We have for the first time applied a rigorous maximum likelihood method in the analysis of the number distribution of flare energies on pre-main sequence stars. In its differential form this distribution follows a power-law with index alpha = 2.4 +- 0.5, in the range typically observed on late-type stars and the Sun. The flare energy distribution is probably steep enough to explain the heating of stellar coronae by nano-flares (alpha > 2), albeit associated with a rather large uncertainty that leaves some doubt on this conclusion.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
---|---|---|---|---|
2006-08-30 |