Characterization of low-mass companion HD 142527 B
Author
Abstract
Context. The circumstellar disk of the Herbig Fe star HD 142527 is host to several remarkable features including a warped inner disk,
a 120 au-wide annular gap, a prominent dust trap and several spiral arms. A low-mass companion, HD 142527 B, was also found
orbiting the primary star at ∼14 au.
Aims. This study aims to better characterize this companion, which could help explain its impact on the peculiar geometry of the disk.
Methods. We observed the source with VLT/SINFONI in H+K band in pupil-tracking mode. Data were post-processed with several
algorithms based on angular differential imaging (ADI).
Results. HD 142527 B is conspicuously re-detected in most spectral channels, which enables us to extract the first medium-resolution
spectrum of a low-mass companion within 000
.1 from its central star. Fitting our spectrum with both template and synthetic spectra
suggests that the companion is a young M2.5±1.0 star with an effective temperature of 3500 ± 100 K, possibly surrounded with
a hot (1700 K) circum-secondary environment. Pre-main sequence evolutionary tracks provide a mass estimate of 0.34 ± 0.06M ,
independent of the presence of a hot environment. However, the estimated stellar radius and age do depend on that assumption; we
find a radius of 1.37±0.05R (resp. 1.96±0.10R ) and an age of 1.8
+1.2
−0.5 Myr (resp. 0.75±0.25 Myr) in the case of the presence (resp.
absence) of a hot environment contributing in H+K. Our new values for the mass and radius of the companion yield a mass accretion
rate of 4.1–5.8 ×10−9 M yr−1
(2–3% that of the primary).
Conclusions. We have constrained the physical properties of HD 142527 B, thereby illustrating the potential for SINFONI+ADI to
characterize faint close-in companions. The new spectral type makes HD 142527 B a twin of the well-known TW Hya T-Tauri star,
and the revision of its mass to higher values further supports its role in shaping the disk.
Indexation
Artículo de publicación SCOPUS
Identifier
URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/169518
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/201629454
ISSN: 14320746
00046361
Quote Item
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volumen 617, 2018
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