Accreting Object Spectra

 
 

OVERVIEW

Measuring accurate accretion rates of stellar and substellar objects allows us to probe their fundamental formation pathways. Previous studies of excess continuum and line emission have enabled accretion comparisons across mass regimes, ranging from stellar-mass T Tauri stars to substellar objects. However, any astrophysical differences in accretion between these objects remain unclear.

In order to test the different theories of the formation and accretion for substellar objects (i.e brown dwarfs and planetary-mass companions), we need additional observations. Some recent observational projects in this vein are described below:


PEOPLE


PAPERS & PRESENTATIONS

Near-infrared Accretion Signatures from the Circumbinary Planetary-mass Companion Delorme 1 (AB)b

Delorme 1 (AB)b, a ~30-45 Myr circumbinary planetary-mass companion, was recently discovered to exhibit strong Hα emission. This suggests ongoing accretion from a circumplanetary disk, somewhat surprising given canonical gas disk dispersal timescales of 5-10 Myr. Here, we present the first NIR detection of accretion from the companion in Paβ, Paγ, and Brγ emission lines from SOAR/TripleSpec 4.1, confirming and further informing its accreting nature

Probing the Formation Mechanisms of Brown Dwarfs and Planetary-Mass Objects using Keck/LRIS

Measuring accurate accretion rates of stellar and substellar objects allows us to probe their fundamental formation pathways. Previous studies of excess continuum and line emission have enabled accretion comparisons across mass regimes, ranging from stellar-mass T Tauri stars to substellar objects. However, any astrophysical differences in accretion between these objects remain unclear. Thus, we present a two-year study using the Keck Low Resolution Imaging Spectrometer (LRIS) in order to expand the sample of substellar objects from Herczeg et al. (2008) into a lower-mass regime.

 

Ongoing Work

Coming Soon!


 
 
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