ACIS-I observations of NGC2264. Membership and X-ray properties of PMS stars

Apr, 2006
23 pages
Published in:
  • Astron.Astrophys. 455 (2006) 903
e-Print:

Citations per year

2006201120162021202401234567
Abstract: (arXiv)
We analyze a deep, 100 ksec long, Chandra ACIS observation of NGC2264. We detect 420 sources, 85% of which are associated with known optical and NIR counterparts. More than 90% of these counterparts are NGC2264 members, thus significantly increasing the known low mass cluster population by about 100 objects. Among the sources without counterpart, ~50% are likely members, several of which we expect to be previously unknown protostellar objects. We confirm several previous findings on the X-ray activity of low mass PMS stars: X-ray luminosity is related to stellar mass, although with a large scatter: L_X/L_bol is close to but almost invariably below the saturation level, 1e-3. A comparison between CTTS and WTTS shows several differences: CTTS are on average less active than WTTS: their emission may also be more time variable and is on average slightly harder. However, we find evidence in some CTTS of extremely cool, ~0.1-0.2 keV, plasma which we speculate is heated by accretion shocks. We conclude that activity in low mass PMS stars, while generally similar to that of saturated MS stars, may be affected by mass accretion in several ways: accretion is likely responsible for very soft X-ray emission directly produced in the accretion shock: it may reduce the average energy output of solar-like coronae, at the same time making them hotter and more dynamic.