HST measures of Mass Accretion Rates in the Orion Nebula Cluster
Abstract
The present observational understanding of the evolution of the mass accretion rates (Macc) in pre-main sequence stars is limited by the lack of accurate measurements of Macc over homogeneous and large statistical samples of young stars. Such observational effort is needed to properly constrain the theory of star formation and disk evolution. Based on HST/WFPC2 observations, we present a study of Macc for a sample of 700 sources in the Orion Nebula Cluster, ranging from the Hydrogen-burning limit to M 2M. We derive Macc from both the U-band excess and the Hα luminosity (LHα), after determining empirically both the shape of the typical accretion spectrum across the Balmer jump and the relation between the accretion luminosity (Lacc) and LHα, that is Lacc/L = (1.310.03)·LHα/L + (2.63 0.13). Given our large statistical sample, we are able to accurately investigate relations between Macc and the parameters of the central star such as mass and age. We clearly find Macc to increase with stellar mass, and decrease over evolutionary time, but we also find strong evidence that the decay of Macc with stellar age occurs over longer timescales for more massive PMS stars. Our best fit relation between these parameters is given by: log(Macc/M·yr)=(-5.12 0.86) -(0.46 0.13) · log(t/yr) -(5.75 1.47)· log(M/M) + (1.17 0.23)· log(t/yr) · log(M/M). These results also suggest that the similarity solution model could be revised for sources with M > 0.5M. Finally, we do not find a clear trend indicating environmental effects on the accretion properties of the sources.
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