Further X-ray detections of Herbig stars
B. Stelzer (1), J. Robrade (2), J. H. M. M. Schmitt (2), J. Bouvier, (3) ((1)-INAF Osservatorio Astronomico di Palermo, (2) Hamburger Sternwarte,, (3) Laboratoire d'Astrophysique, Observatoire de Grenoble)

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution Chandra X-ray images to investigate the origin of X-ray emissions in Herbig Ae/Be stars, finding all such stars in the sample emit X-rays, with properties suggesting possible unresolved low-mass companions or intrinsic activity.
Contribution
It provides new high-resolution X-ray observations of Herbig stars with known companions, supporting the hypothesis of unresolved low-mass companions or intrinsic activity as X-ray sources.
Findings
All Herbig stars in the sample emit X-rays.
Herbig stars have hotter/more absorbed plasma than B-type stars.
High X-ray temperatures challenge wind-only emission models.
Abstract
The interpretation of X-ray detections from Herbig Ae/Be stars is disputed as it is not clear if these intermediate-mass pre-main sequence stars are able to drive a dynamo and ensuing phenomena of magnetic activity. Alternative X-ray production mechanisms, related to stellar winds, star-disk magnetospheres, or unresolved late-type T Tauri star companions have been proposed. In a series of papers we have been investigating high-resolution X-ray Chandra images of Herbig Ae/Be and main-sequence B-type stars to test the T Tauri hypothesis by spatially resolving known visual companions from the primaries. Here we report on six as yet unpublished Chandra exposures from our X-ray survey of Herbig stars. The target list comprises six Herbig stars with known cool companions, and three further A/B-type stars that are serendipitously in the Chandra field-of-view. In this sample we record a…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
