HRC-I/Chandra X-ray observations towards sigma Orionis
J. A. Caballero, J. F. Albacete-Colombo, J. Lopez-Santiago

TL;DR
This study used Chandra X-ray observations to analyze the X-ray emission of young stars and brown dwarfs in the sigma Orionis cluster, revealing variability, correlations with stellar properties, and identifying sources with high X-ray activity.
Contribution
First comprehensive X-ray analysis of sigma Orionis cluster members combining multiple datasets, highlighting variability and properties of young stars and brown dwarfs.
Findings
Detected 70 cluster stars with X-ray emission
Identified variability in several sources, including flares and long-term flux changes
Found correlations between X-ray activity and stellar characteristics
Abstract
Aims: We investigated the X-ray emission from young stars and brown dwarfs in the sigma Orionis cluster (tau~3 Ma, d~385 pc) and its relation to mass, presence of circumstellar discs, and separation to the cluster centre by taking advantage of the superb spatial resolution of the Chandra X-ray Observatory. Methods: We used public HRC-I/Chandra data from a 97.6 ks pointing towards the cluster centre and complemented them with X-ray data from IPC/Einstein, HRI/ROSAT, EPIC/XMM-Newton, and ACIS-S/Chandra together with optical and infrared photometry and spectroscopy from the literature and public catalogues. On our HRC-I/Chandra data, we measured count rates, estimated X-ray fluxes, and searched for short-term variability. We also looked for long-term variability by comparing with previous X-ray observations. Results: Among the 107 detected X-ray sources, there were 70 cluster stars with…
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.
