1,946 research outputs found
The Formation of Brown Dwarfs: Observations
We review the current state of observational work on the formation of brown
dwarfs, focusing on their initial mass function, velocity and spatial
distributions at birth, multiplicity, accretion, and circumstellar disks. The
available measurements of these various properties are consistent with a common
formation mechanism for brown dwarfs and stars. In particular, the existence of
widely separated binary brown dwarfs and a probable isolated proto-brown dwarf
indicate that some substellar objects are able to form in the same manner as
stars through unperturbed cloud fragmentation. Additional mechanisms such as
ejection and photoevaporation may play a role in the birth of some brown
dwarfs, but there is no observational evidence to date to suggest that they are
the key elements that make it possible for substellar bodies to form.Comment: Protostars and Planets V, in pres
Low EUV Luminosities Impinging on Protoplanetary Disks
The amount of high-energy stellar radiation reaching the surface of
protoplanetary disks is essential to determine their chemistry and physical
evolution. Here, we use millimetric and centimetric radio data to constrain the
EUV luminosity impinging on 14 disks around young (~2-10Myr) sun-like stars.
For each object we identify the long-wavelength emission in excess to the dust
thermal emission, attribute that to free-free disk emission, and thereby
compute an upper limit to the EUV reaching the disk. We find upper limits lower
than 10 photons/s for all sources without jets and lower than photons/s for the three older sources in our sample. These latter
values are low for EUV-driven photoevaporation alone to clear out
protoplanetary material in the timescale inferred by observations. In addition,
our EUV upper limits are too low to reproduce the [NeII] 12.81 micron
luminosities from three disks with slow [NeII]-detected winds. This indicates
that the [NeII] line in these sources primarily traces a mostly neutral wind
where Ne is ionized by 1 keV X-ray photons, implying higher photoevaporative
mass loss rates than those predicted by EUV-driven models alone. In summary,
our results suggest that high-energy stellar photons other than EUV may
dominate the dispersal of protoplanetary disks around sun-like stars.Comment: Accepted for publication to The Astrophysical Journa
The Herschel/PACS view of disks around low-mass stars in Chamaleon-I
Circumstellar disks are expected to be the birthplaces of planets. The
potential for forming one or more planets of various masses is essentially
driven by the initial mass of the disks. We present and analyze Herschel/PACS
observations of disk-bearing M-type stars that belong to the young ~2 Myr old
Chamaleon-I star forming region. We used the radiative transfer code RADMC to
successfully model the SED of 17 M-type stars detected at PACS wavelengths. We
first discuss the relatively low detection rates of M5 and later spectral type
stars with respect to the PACS sensitivity, and argue their disks masses, or
flaring indices, are likely to be low. For M0 to M3 stars, we find a relatively
broad range of disk masses, scale heights, and flaring indices. Via a
parametrization of dust stratification, we can reproduce the peak fluxes of the
10 m emission feature observed with Spitzer/IRS, and find that disks
around M-type stars may display signs of dust sedimentation. The Herschel/PACS
observations of low-mass stars in Cha-I provide new constraints on their disk
properties, overall suggesting that disk parameters for early M-type stars are
comparable to those for more massive stars (e.g., comparable scale height and
flaring angles). However, regions of the disks emitting at about 100 m may
still be in the optically thick regime, preventing direct determination of disk
masses. Thus the modeled disk masses should be considered as lower limits.
Still, we are able to extend the wavelength coverage of SED models and start
characterizing effects such as dust sedimentation, an effort leading the way
towards ALMA observations of these low-mass stars
A Search for Companions to Brown Dwarfs in the Taurus and Chamaeleon Star Forming Regions
We present the results of a search for companions to young brown dwarfs in
the Taurus and Chamaeleon I star forming regions (1/2-3 Myr). We have used
WFPC2 on board HST to obtain F791W and F850LP images of 47 members of these
regions that have spectral types of M6-L0 (0.01-0.1 Msun). An additional
late-type member of Taurus, FU Tau (M7.25+M9.25), was also observed with
adaptive optics at Keck Observatory. We have applied PSF subtraction to the
primaries and have searched the resulting images for objects that have colors
and magnitudes that are indicative of young low-mass objects. Through this
process, we have identified promising candidate companions to 2MASS
J04414489+2301513 (rho=0.105"/15 AU), 2MASS J04221332+1934392 (rho=0.05"/7 AU),
and ISO 217 (rho=0.03"/5 AU). We reported the discovery of the first candidate
in a previous study, showing that it has a similar proper motion as the primary
through a comparison of astrometry measured with WFPC2 and Gemini adaptive
optics. We have collected an additional epoch of data with Gemini that further
supports that result. By combining our survey with previous high-resolution
imaging in Taurus, Chamaeleon, and Upper Sco (10 Myr), we measure binary
fractions of 14/93 = 0.15+0.05/-0.03 for M4-M6 (0.1-0.3 Msun) and 4/108 =
0.04+0.03/-0.01 for >M6 (10 AU. Given the youth
and low density of these three regions, the lower binary fraction at later
types is probably primordial rather than due to dynamical interactions among
association members. The widest low-mass binaries (>100 AU) also appear to be
more common in Taurus and Chamaeleon than in the field, which suggests that the
widest low-mass binaries are disrupted by dynamical interactions at >10 Myr, or
that field brown dwarfs have been born predominantly in denser clusters where
wide systems are disrupted or inhibited from forming.Comment: Astrophysical Journal, in pres
ALMA Observations of the Young Substellar Binary System 2M1207
We present ALMA observations of the 2M1207 system, a young binary made of a
brown dwarf with a planetary-mass companion at a projected separation of about
40 au. We detect emission from dust continuum at 0.89 mm and from the rotational transition of CO from a very compact disk around the young brown
dwarf. The small radius found for this brown dwarf disk may be due to
truncation from the tidal interaction with the planetary-mass companion. Under
the assumption of optically thin dust emission, we estimated a dust mass of 0.1
for the 2M1207A disk, and a 3 upper limit of for dust surrounding 2M1207b, which is the tightest upper
limit obtained so far for the mass of dust particles surrounding a young
planetary-mass companion. We discuss the impact of this and other
non-detections of young planetary-mass companions for models of planet
formation, which predict the presence of circum-planetary material surrounding
these objects.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in A
The VLTI/MIDI survey of massive young stellar objects - Sounding the inner regions around intermediate- and high-mass young stars using mid-infrared interferometry
We aim to characterize the distribution and composition of circumstellar
material around young massive stars, and to investigate exactly which physical
structures in these objects are probed by long-baseline mid-infrared
interferometric observations. We used the two-telescope interferometric
instrument MIDI of the Very Large Telescope Interferometer of the European
Southern Observatory to observe a sample of 24 intermediate- and high-mass
young stellar objects in the N band (8-13 micron). We had successful fringe
detections for 20 objects, and present spectrally-resolved correlated fluxes
and visibility levels for projected baselines of up to 128 m. We fit the
visibilities with geometric models to derive the sizes of the emitting regions,
as well as the orientation and elongation of the circumstellar material.
Fourteen objects in the sample show the 10 micron silicate feature in
absorption in the total and correlated flux spectra. For 13 of these objects,
we were able to fit the correlated flux spectra with a simple absorption model,
allowing us to constrain the composition and absorptive properties of the
circumstellar material. Nearly all of the massive young stellar objects
observed show significant deviations from spherical symmetry at mid-infrared
wavelengths. In general, the mid-infrared emission can trace both disks and
outflows, and in many cases it may be difficult to disentangle these components
on the basis of interferometric data alone, because of the sparse spatial
frequency coverage normally provided by current long-baseline interferometers.
For the majority of the objects in this sample, the absorption occurs on
spatial scales larger than those probed by MIDI. Finally, the physical extent
of the mid-infrared emission around these sources is correlated with the total
luminosity, albeit with significant scatter.Comment: 36 pages, 22 figures. Accepted to Astronomy and Astrophysic
First Detection of Millimeter Dust Emission from Brown Dwarf Disks
We report results from the first deep millimeter continuum survey targeting
Brown Dwarfs (BDs). The survey led to the first detection of cold dust in the
disks around two young BDs (CFHT-BD-Tau 4 and IC348 613), with deep JCMT and
IRAM observations reaching flux levels of a few mJy. The dust masses are
estimated to be a few Earth masses assuming the same dust opacities as usually
applied to TTauri stars.Comment: 5 pages, accepted for ApJ
X-Shooter study of accretion in Chamaeleon I: II. A steeper increase of accretion with stellar mass for very low mass stars?
The dependence of the mass accretion rate on the stellar properties is a key
constraint for star formation and disk evolution studies. Here we present a
study of a sample of stars in the Chamaeleon I star forming region carried out
using the VLT/X-Shooter spectrograph. The sample is nearly complete down to
M~0.1Msun for the young stars still harboring a disk in this region. We derive
the stellar and accretion parameters using a self-consistent method to fit the
broad-band flux-calibrated medium resolution spectrum. The correlation between
the accretion luminosity to the stellar luminosity, and of the mass accretion
rate to the stellar mass in the logarithmic plane yields slopes of 1.9 and 2.3,
respectively. These slopes and the accretion rates are consistent with previous
results in various star forming regions and with different theoretical
frameworks. However, we find that a broken power-law fit, with a steeper slope
for stellar luminosity smaller than ~0.45 Lsun and for stellar masses smaller
than ~ 0.3 Msun, is slightly preferred according to different statistical
tests, but the single power-law model is not excluded. The steeper relation for
lower mass stars can be interpreted as a faster evolution in the past for
accretion in disks around these objects, or as different accretion regimes in
different stellar mass ranges. Finally, we find two regions on the mass
accretion versus stellar mass plane empty of objects. One at high mass
accretion rates and low stellar masses, which is related to the steeper
dependence of the two parameters we derived. The second one is just above the
observational limits imposed by chromospheric emission. This empty region is
located at M~0.3-0.4Msun, typical masses where photoevaporation is known to be
effective, and at mass accretion rates ~10^-10 Msun/yr, a value compatible with
the one expected for photoevaporation to rapidly dissipate the inner disk.Comment: Accepted for publication on Astronomy & Astrophysics. Abstract
shortened for arxiv constraints. Revised version after language editin
Medium-separation binaries do not affect the first steps of planet formation
The first steps of planet formation are marked by the growth and
crystallization of sub-micrometer-sized dust grains accompanied by dust
settling toward the disk midplane. In this paper we explore whether the first
steps of planet formation are affected by the presence of medium-separation
stellar companions. We selected two large samples of disks around single and
binary T Tauri stars in Taurus that are thought to have only a modest age
spread of a few Myr. The companions of our binary sample are at projected
separations between 10 and 450 AU with masses down to about 0.1 solar masses.
We used the strength and shape of the 10 micron silicate emission feature as a
proxy for grain growth and for crystallization respectively. The degree of dust
settling was evaluated from the ratio of fluxes at two different mid-infrared
wavelengths. We find no statistically significant difference between the
distribution of 10 micron silicate emission features from single and binary
systems. In addition, the distribution of disk flaring is indistinguishable
between the single and binary system samples. These results show that the first
steps of planet formation are not affected by the presence of a companion at
tens of AU.Comment: To appear in the Astrophysical Journa
The Beauty of the Commons? Consumers participation in Food Community Networks
Why are consumers increasingly joining farmers to co-produce and transact sustainable foods world-wide? May these networks be a new tool to promote sustainable practices?
As stated by Sandler (2010): “Longitudinal collective action environmental problems are likely to be effectively addressed only by an enormous number of individuals each making a nearly insignificant contribution to resolving them”. Consumers-farmers networks may serve this scope by inducing individual actors to change their preferences towards sustainable products. However participation in these networks is still not well understood.
On one hand new institutional economics explains consumers joining farmers in creating a network as a choice of the “most cost-economizing” governance structure to carry out a transaction where credence attributes are involved (i.e. sustainable-produced foodstuff). Thus a credence food is transacted through a consumers-farmers network if this governance structure can ensure the minimization of the transaction costs. However the way different (transactional) contexts can influence the change of consumers perceptions and preferences for credence foods is still not completely addressed. On the other hand behavioral economics underlines the role of social and psychological motivations such as altruism and fairness, to describe this type of decision making process. Still a clear link between transaction costs, motivations and the choice context to describe consumers participation in these networks is not completely understood and analysed.
In this paper we use both new institutional and behavioural economics arguments to conceptualize the consumers participation in this new type of governance structures, which we have defined as food community network (FCN). More specifically we have investigated an Italian fast-spreading type of FCN named Solidarity Purchase Group . GAS are associations of consumers whose behavior is characterized by a strong philosophical and ethical agreement in which the territorial, economic and social ties between the individuals involved in it, tend to evolve into networks of participative economy.
The present study, which is part of a wider study financed by the Sicilian Regional Authority, analyses the GAS presence in Sicily (a region in Southern Italy), where 32 active GAS are present, representing an estimated number of 1,200 families. Although this phenomenon is still marginal and limited to recent years, it can be particularly interesting because of its rapid proliferation. Attention to this type of participative consumerism is warranted for two reasons: firstly, because of its progressive expansion into rural areas, far from the main cities where the phenomenon originated, and secondly, because of its potential impact on the sustainability of food production in this region.
To evaluate the potential impact of this phenomenon in Sicily a sample of involved consumers has been interviewed. This sample included some 200 individuals (those in the household in charge of buying) belonging to the main GAS operating in Sicily. This group represents 946 consumers. More specifically a survey was developed to investigate consumers participation in this GAS. In the questionnaire three main issues have been investigated: transaction costs, motivations and social preferences (i.e. altruism and trust), and choice context features as driving factors of consumers participation. Moreover we controlled for i) attitudes towards environmental protection and nature, industrial food production, technological progress, animal welfare, food and environment; ii) consumption frequencies and type of purchased products (i.e. organic, other certified products, conventional products, environmental friendly products and not certified products); and iii) socio-demographic characteristics of the respondents, including food-related lifestyle (FRL).
The transaction-costs-related, motivational and choice-context-related variables have used to analyse different level of participation, comparing results from a conditional logit model with a latent-class one. Results indicate different factors affecting participation and profiles of GAS participants, which we can classify as follow: environmentalism and ecological sensitivity (1); gourmet, innovations and creativity (2); cultural patriotism and ethnocentrism (3); animal welfarism (4); cost and price awareness (5); belief in food traditionalism and purity of cuisine (6).
Based on these results policy implications have been drawn to promote public support of GAS and food community networks both in the Italian and European contexts
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