Redshifted X-rays from the material accreting onto TW Hya: evidence of a low-latitude accretion spot
C. Argiroffi (1,2), J. J. Drake (3), R. Bonito (2), S. Orlando (2), G., Peres (1,2), M. Miceli (1, 2) ((1) Dip. di Fisica e Chimica,, Universita' di Palermo, Italy, (2) INAF - Osservatorio Astronomico di, Palermo, Italy, (3) Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, Cambridge, MA,

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution X-ray spectroscopy to detect Doppler shifts in TW Hya, confirming the post-shock origin of accreting plasma and revealing low-latitude accretion spots due to magnetic field geometry.
Contribution
First detection of Doppler-shifted X-ray emission in TW Hya, constraining accretion stream geometry and magnetic field configuration.
Findings
X-ray emitting plasma has a line-of-sight velocity of 38.3 km/s.
Accretion footpoints are located at low stellar latitudes.
Post-shock plasma at 2-4 MK and 0.1 MK likely originate from the same region.
Abstract
High resolution spectroscopy, providing constraints on plasma motions and temperatures, is a powerful means to investigate the structure of accretion streams in CTTS. In particular, the accretion shock region, where the accreting material is heated to temperatures of a few MK as it continues its inward bulk motion, can be probed by X-ray spectroscopy. To attempt to detect for the first time the motion of this X-ray-emitting post-shock material, we searched for a Doppler shift in the deep Chandra/HETGS observation of the CTTS TW Hya. This test should unveil the nature of this X-ray emitting plasma component in CTTS, and constrain the accretion stream geometry. We searched for a Doppler shift in the X-ray emission from TW Hya with two different methods, by measuring the position of a selected sample of emission lines, and by fitting the whole TW Hya X-ray spectrum, allowing the…
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