The Enigmatic Young Low-Mass Variable TWA 30
Dagny L. Looper (IfA/UH), Subhanjoy Mohanty (Imperial College), John, J. Bochanski (MIT), Adam J. Burgasser (UCSD/MIT), Eric E. Mamajek (U, Rochester), Gregory J. Herczeg (Max Planck Institut), Andrew A. West (Boston, University)

TL;DR
TWA 30 is a young, low-mass star with unique outflow signatures and variability, providing a rare opportunity to study disk evolution and planet formation in an edge-on system.
Contribution
This paper presents detailed observations of TWA 30, revealing rare emission lines and variability patterns that shed light on disk structure and outflow processes in young low-mass stars.
Findings
Presence of rare [O III] and Mg I] emission lines.
Evidence of an edge-on disk orientation.
Variability in emission line profiles and reddening.
Abstract
TWA 30 is a remarkable young (7+/-3 Myr), low-mass (0.12+/-0.04 Msun), late-type star (M5+/-1) residing 42+/-2 pc away from the sun in the TW Hydrae Association. It shows strong outflow spectral signatures such as [S II], [O I], [O II], [O III], and Mg I], while exhibiting weak Halpha emission (-6.8+/-1.2 Angstroms). Emission lines of [S II] and [O I] are common to T Tauri stars still residing in their natal molecular clouds, while [O III] and Mg I] emission lines are incredibly rare in this same population; in the case of TWA 30, these latter lines may arise from new outflow material colliding into older outflow fronts. The weak Halpha emission and small radial velocity shifts of line emission relative to the stellar frame of rest (generally <=10 km/s) suggest that the disk is viewed close to edge-on and that the stellar axis may be inclined to the disk, similar to the AA Tau system,…
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