SIMBAD references

2019ApJ...886...95D - Astrophys. J., 886, 95-95 (2019/December-1)

A search for intermediate-separation low-mass binaries in the Orion Nebula Cluster.

DE FURIO M., REITER M., MEYER M.R., GREENBAUM A., DUPUY T. and KRAUS A.

Abstract (from CDS):

We present the results of a binary population study in the Orion Nebula Cluster (ONC) using archival Hubble Space Telescope (HST) data obtained with the Advanced Camera for Surveys in Johnson V filter (HST Proposal 10246, PI M. Robberto). Young clusters and associations hold clues to the origin and properties of multiple star systems. Binaries with separations <100 au are useful as tracers of the initial binary population because they are not as likely to be destroyed through dynamical interactions. Low-mass, low stellar density, star-forming regions such as Taurus-Auriga, reveal an excess of multiples compared to the Galactic field. Studying the binary population of higher mass, higher stellar density star-forming regions like the ONC provides useful information concerning the origin of the Galactic field star population. In this survey, we characterize the previously unexplored (and incomplete) separation parameter space of binaries in the ONC (15-160 au) by fitting a double-point-spread function (PSF) model built from empirical PSFs. We identified 14 candidate binaries (11 new detections) and find that 8_-2 %_^+4 % ^ of our observed sample are in binary systems, complete over mass ratios and separations of 0.6 < q < 1.0 and 30 < a < 160 au. This is consistent with the Galactic field M-dwarf population over the same parameter ranges, 6.5% ± 3%. Therefore, high-mass star-forming regions like the ONC would not require further dynamical evolution for their binary population to resemble the Galactic field, as some models have hypothesized for young clusters.

Abstract Copyright: © 2019. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

Journal keyword(s): binaries: general - methods: observational - stars: low-mass - stars: pre-main sequence - techniques: photometric

Simbad objects: 108

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