POISSON project - I - Emission lines as accretion tracers in young stellar objects: results from observations of Chamaeleon I and II sources
S. Antoniucci, R. Garcia Lopez, B. Nisini, T. Giannini, D. Lorenzetti,, J. Eisloeffel, F. Bacciotti, S. Cabrit, A. Caratti o Garatti, C. Dougados and, T. Ray

TL;DR
This study analyzes optical and near-infrared spectra of 47 young stellar objects in Chamaeleon I and II to evaluate emission lines as tracers for accretion luminosity and rate, finding Brg to be the most reliable indicator.
Contribution
It provides a systematic comparison of multiple emission line tracers for accretion in YSOs, highlighting the reliability of Brg and exploring emission mechanisms.
Findings
Brg is the most reliable accretion tracer with minimal dispersion.
Accretion luminosity correlates with stellar luminosity as Lacc=0.1L*-1L*.
Mass accretion rates are around 10^-7 to 10^-9 Msun/yr.
Abstract
We present the results of the analysis of LR optical-NIR spectra (0.6-2.4 um) of a sample 47 YSOs in the ChaI and II star-forming clouds. These data are part of the POISSON project (Protostellar Optical-Infrared Spectral Survey on NTT). The aim is to determine the accretion luminosity (Lacc) and mass accretion rate (Macc) of the sources through the analysis of the detected emission features. We also aim at verifying the reliability and consistency of the existing empirical relationships connecting emission line luminosity and Lacc. We employ five tracers (OI-6300A, Ha, CaII-8542A, Pab, and Brg) to derive the accretion luminosity. The tracers provide Lacc values showing different scatters when plotted as a function of L*. The Brg seems to be the most reliable, because it gives the minimum Lacc dispersion over the entire range of L*, whereas the other tracers provide much more scattered…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Molecular Spectroscopy and Structure · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
