José Antonio Caballero1 Eduardo Lorenzo Martín1 María Rosa Zapatero Osorio2 Víctor Javier S. Béjar1 Rafael Rebolo1,3 . gotzon 18-1-95 . 1: Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias 2: LAEFF-INTA 3: Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas Introduction: T Tauri stars and brown dwarfs. T Tauri stars are the bridge between recently born embedded protostars and zero age main sequence stars. They are very young objects, with ages lower than 20-30 Myr. They are found in young open clusters or in nearby star forming regions. According to the strength of the Balmer lines, they are classified as Classical T Tauri Stars (CTTS) or Weak-line T Tauri Stars. The most prominent characteristics of the CTTS are the presence of lithium in absorption and the existence of strong emission lines in their spectra, especially the Ha line and the Ca II H&K doublet. Several CTTS also display photometric variability, ultraviolet and/or infrared excess, optical veiling, strong X-ray emission, winds or jets. The best scenario to explain all these features is the magnetospheric accretion of mass infalling from a surrounding circumstellar disc. Bertout (1988), Appenzeller & Mundt (1989) or Koenigl (1991) have reviewed the properties of T Tauri stars. The T Tauri scenario has been considered, in general, for stars in the mass range between 3 and 0.2 Msol. However, the existence of a T Tauri phase in objects below the hydrogen burning limit (~0.072 Msol for solar metallicity) suggested by several authors during the past few years (see, for example, Barrado y Navascués & Martín 2003 and references therein) has raised a lot of interest. S Ori J053825.4-024241: A Classical T Tauri-like object in the substellar limit S Ori J053825.4-024241. It was first detected by Béjar et al. (2004) in an RI survey of the young (2-4 Myr) nearby (~350 pc) σ Orionis cluster. Soon after, Caballero et al. (2004) found S Ori J053825.4-024241 to be a highly photometric variable object. It displayed photometric variations of ~0.36 mag in less than two days, and of ~0.09 mag in less than two hours, having the largest amplitude of variation in the sample of 28 brown dwarfs examined. A strong near infrared excess in the Ks band was also detected. Abstract: We present photometric and spectroscopic results on S Ori J053825.4024241, an M 6.0±0.5 dwarf in the frontier between stars and brown dwarfs of the young (2-4 Myr) nearby (~350 pc) σ Orionis open cluster. Observations. Photometric monitoring in the I band and in white light using 1 m-class telescopes and spectroscopic observations of different resolutions were performed during the 2003-04 winter. We have used data collected at the ! 0.82-m IAC-80, ! the 1.0-m Orbital Ground Station, ! the 1.55-m Telescopio Carlos Sánchez, ! the 2.5-m Isaac Newton Telescope, ! the 2.56-m Nordic Optical Telescope, ! the 3.5-m Calar Alto Teleskop, ! the 8-m Very Large Telescope Ut1 Antu and ! the 10-m Keck I Telescope . Caballero et al. (2004) showed that it is strongly photometrically variable and has near infrared excess in the Ks band. Here, we confirm its optical variability, with an amplitude of about half a magnitude, which is extraordinary large for such a low mass object (between 0.06 and 0.08 Msolar). Variations in timescales of hours and days have been detected. Additionally, it displays strong Hα emission, with a persistent pseudo-equivalent width of more than 200 Å, possibly associated to mass accretion from a surrounding disc. Other emission lines, including forbidden lines, which are usually associated to outflows, have been detected in a medium resolution spectrum. S Ori J053825.4-024241 appears to be one of the least massive Classical T Tauri-like objects ever detected. Optical photometric variability (four figures, below) Top left: I-band lightcurve of S Ori J053825.4-024241 (bottom, red stars) and of a reference star in the same field of view (top, small blue dots). Data were taken with the CCD at the IAC-80. Vertical scale is similar in both plots. The lightcurve of S Ori J053825.4-024241 shows a big magnitude decrease that lasted for one week. Top right: Same as previous figure, but zooming the two nights in which the object was monitored during about 2.5 h. An additional lower-amplitude short-term variability pattern can be evaluated, superimposed to the main cycle. Bottom left: Lightcurve in white light of S Ori J053825.4-024241 (red stars) and of a reference star in the same field of view (small blue dots). Data were taken with ESACCD at the OGS. It is seen the big dip around 30 January 2003, as shown in the IAC-80 plots. Bottom right: Same as previous figure, but zooming the four consecutive nights. The superimposed lower-amplitude variability pattern with timescales of hours is clearly seen. Medium and low resolution spectroscopy (two figures below) Top: Low resolution spectrum of S Ori J053825.4-024241 taken with ALFOSC at the NOT Telescope on 26 Dec 2003. Spectral coverage is 5500 to 9000 Å. From this spectrum we infer a spectral type of M 6.0±0.5. Hα is in emission with a pseudo-equivalent width of ~210 Å and FWHM > 200 km/s. Such a velocity is higher than expected for a rotational period (otherwise the object would be disrupted). We interpret the large FWHM to be associated to a surrounding accretion disc or ejection of material. Bottom: Part of the wavelength-calibrated mid-resolution spectrum taken with LRIS at the Keck I Telescope on 23 Jan 2004, centered in 6300 Å. Besides Hα (pEW(Hα) ~285 Å), we have detected the He I D3 λ5876Å triplet and the forbidden lines [O I] λ6300 Å and possibly [N II] λ6583 Å. We can establish only an upper limit for the pseudo-equivalent width of Li I λ6708 Å (<0.2 Å). This line may be severely affected by disk veiling. Our Vrad measurement is consistent with the σ Orionis cluster systemic velocity. The [O I] emission line (which is not a photospheric line) is blue-shifted with respect the mean velocity of the object. This effect is also observed in CTTSs with jets pointing toward us, supporting the disc scenario. Right: J-band image of the field around S Ori J053825.4-024241 taken with the ISAAC instrument at the Very Large Telescope UT1 Antu on 10 Dec 2001. Size is roughly 2.5 arcmin x 4.9 arcmin. S Ori J053825.4-024241 is marked with a yellow square. The bright HD 294273 star, 1 arcmin to the South East of S Ori J053825.4-024241, is an A 3 star that presumably belong to the σ Orionis cluster (based on colour and spectroscopic data). Projected physical separation is ~20 000 AU at the distance of the cluster. ! Conclusions. We confirm the Classical T Tauri-like nature of S Ori J053825.4024241 through an intensive optical photometric monitoring and low and intermediate resolution spectra. Several observational data suggest that this young very low mass M 6 dwarf is surrounded by an accretion disc. We have detected long-term photometric variations of almost 0.5 mag in time scales of one week and short-term variability of ~0.1 in scale of hours. Two measurements of the Hα pseudoequivalent width at two different epochs give values larger than 200 Å. We have also detected several emission lines, including forbidden lines of oxygen, that are characteristic of T Tauri stars. New photometric and spectroscopic observations are ongoing. Quantity R.A. Dec. R I J H Ks Sp. Type pEW(Hα) pEW(Li I) pEW([O I]) H-Ks vs. J-H colour-colour digram of objects of the σ Orionis cluster. S Ori J053825.4-024241 displays a strong nIR excess (from Caballero et al. Value 05 38 25.44 -02 42 41.2 18.66 16.86 14.88 14.16 13.57 M 6.0±0.5 210-285 Å <0.2 Å 2.3±0.5 Å 2.2±0.5 Å ! ! ! ! Appenzeller Mundt, R. 1989, A&ARv, 1, 291 Barrado y Navascués, D., Martín, E. L. 2003, AJ, 126, 2997 Béjar, V. J. S., Zapatero Osorio, M. R., Rebolo, R. 2004, Astron. Nachr., in press Caballero, J. A., Béjar, V. J. S., Rebolo, R, Zapatero Osorio, M. R., 2004, A&A, in press Koenigl, A. 1991, ApJ, 370, L39 Table. We give the J2000.0 coordinates, average RIJHKs magnitudes and the measurements of the pseudo-equivalent widths of several lines. The object is variable in most of the bands.
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