The Chamaeleon II low-mass star-forming region: radial velocities, elemental abundances, and accretion properties
K. Biazzo (1), J. M. Alcal\'a (1), E. Covino (1), A. Frasca (2), F., Getman (1), L. Spezzi (3) ((1) INAF - Capodimonte Astronomical Observatory,, (2) INAF - Catania Astrophysical Observatory, (3) ESO - European Southern, Observatory)

TL;DR
This study combines optical spectroscopy and infrared data to analyze the properties of young stars in the Chamaeleon II region, revealing relationships between accretion rates, stellar parameters, and disk evolution.
Contribution
It provides new measurements of radial velocities, elemental abundances, and accretion rates for Cha II members, and establishes correlations between accretion, stellar properties, and disk states.
Findings
Radial velocity distribution of Cha II stars is centered at 11.4 km/s.
Accretion rate scales with stellar mass as M^1.3 and decreases with age.
Inner disk transitions from optically thick to thin at accretion rates around 10^-10 Msun/yr.
Abstract
Radial velocities, elemental abundances, and accretion properties of members of star-forming regions (SFRs) are important for understanding star and planet formation. While infrared observations reveal the evolutionary status of the disk, optical spectroscopy is fundamental to acquire information on the properties of the central star and on the accretion characteristics. 2MASS archive data and the Spitzer c2d survey of the Chamaeleon II dark cloud have provided disk properties of a large number of young stars. We complement these data with spectroscopy with the aim of providing physical stellar parameters and accretion properties. We use FLAMES/UVES+GIRAFFE observations of 40 members of Cha II to measure radial velocities through cross-correlation technique, Li abundances by means of curves of growth, and for a suitable star elemental abundances of Fe, Al, Si, Ca, Ti, and Ni using the…
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