On the Reliability of Stellar Ages and Age Spreads Inferred from Pre-Main Sequence Evolutionary Models
Takashi Hosokawa, Stella S.R. Offner, Mark R. Krumholz

TL;DR
This study investigates the reliability of stellar age and age spread estimates from pre-main-sequence models by incorporating accretion processes and comparing with observations, finding that ages of cool stars are generally reliable.
Contribution
The paper introduces accretion-inclusive models of PMS stellar evolution and systematically assesses their impact on age estimates compared to traditional non-accreting models.
Findings
Non-accreting isochrones can overestimate ages of more massive stars.
Age estimates for cool stars are reliable if observational data are accurate.
Time-dependent accretion rates have minimal impact on low-mass star evolution.
Abstract
We revisit the problem of low-mass pre-main-sequence (PMS) stellar evolution and its observational consequences for where stars fall on the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram (HRD). In contrast to most previous work, our models follow stars as they grow from small masses via accretion, and we perform a systematic study of how the stars' HRD evolution is influenced by their initial radius, by the radiative properties of the accretion flow, and by the accretion history, using both simple idealized accretion histories and histories taken from numerical simulations of star cluster formation. We compare our numerical results to both non-accreting isochrones and to the positions of observed stars in the HRD, with a goal of determining whether both the absolute ages and the age dispersions inferred from non-accreting isochrones are reliable. We show that non-accreting isochrones can sometimes…
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