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Variable Star Of The Season
December 2006: 0533+26 RR Tauri
"Stars are equal; it is not birth but mass that makes the difference"
- (paraphrasing Voltaire on men)
Birth of a star: getting to the main sequence
Young stellar objects show a multitude of different phenomena that are
related to the formation and early evolution of stars. The life of a star
begins with gravitational contraction in a dense interstellar cloud.
Initiated by some external perturbation, like a nearby supernova
explosion, seeds of stars are created via increased density in molecular
clouds, which eventually lead to an accelerated contraction of
matter. Star formation is also accompanied by complex inflow and outflow
processes that will determine the final mass of the newly formed star.
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| Pre-main sequence evolutionary tracks. Herbig Ae/Be stars, which include RR
Tau, have masses from 2 to 8-10 solar masses, so that they live as pre-main
sequence objects for 105--106 years before reaching the
hydrogen-burning main sequence phase. (Credit: D. Gary, NJIT) |
During the contraction phase, the central regions of these
protostars are heated up, first by converting gravitational potential
energy to heat and then by igniting the first thermonuclear reactions in
form of nuclear burning of deuterium. When the protostar reaches a
certain temperature, external mass accretion stops due to the increased
radiation pressure. After this point, the star will continue its
contraction until the core temperature reaches about 107 K and hydrogen
fusion is ignited. Ordinary stars will spend most of their lifetimes
converting hydrogen to helium in their cores and it is this phase of
energy production that defines the main sequence of the
Hertzsprung-Russell diagram.
Young stellar objects between the end of external mass accretion and
beginning of core hydrogen burning are called pre-main sequence (PMS)
stars. As always in stellar astrophysics, different classes of PMS objects
have been defined according to their masses. Low-mass objects with masses
around 1 solar mass are known as T Tauri stars, whose formation is reasonably
well-understood (see also
T Tauri in the
VSOTS Archive). Massive stars with masses greater than 10 solar
masses are only formed in giant molecular clouds and these objects spend their
whole PMS time as obscured objects, optically invisible due to extremely
strong dust obscuration. Intermediate-mass PMS stars
between about 2 and 10 solar masses, are in many sense the interface between
low-mass and high-mass star formation, thus bridging the gap between the
two ends of the mass spectrum. Named after George H. Herbig, who first
studied them in a systematic way (Herbig 1960), these objects are the
Herbig Ae/Be (HAEBE) stars. RR Tau, the Winter 2007 Variable Star of the Season,
is one of the best studied northern HAEBE stars with
spectacular light variations.
HAEBE or not HAEBE?
The HAEBE stars were first discussed as a group in a paper by Herbig
(1960) that started a whole new research field. He studied Ae and Be
stars (i.e. stars of spectral types A and B, showing emission lines in
their spectra) associated with a nebulosity, and selected a sample of 26
stars based on three criteria:
- The star has spectral type A or B with emission lines,
- it is located in an obscured region, and
- the star illuminates a bright nebulosity in its immediate vicinity.
As Herbig (1960) pointed out in the abstract of his paper, "the
peculiarities did not appear unique to this group: they may be found as
well in stars that are not associated with nebulosity." Indeed, more
recent discoveries of objects that share many but not all of the
properties in Herbig's list justifies a slight adjustment of the
definition. In particular, many new HAEBE stars have been revealed that
appear isolated, i.e. they are not associated with nebulosity and are
not clearly located in an area of active star formation.
Waters &
Waelkens (1998), in their review paper, summarized the latest
developments in the following modified working definition of HAEBE
stars: (a) spectral type A or B with emission lines, (b) infrared excess
radiation due to hot or cool circumstellar dust or both, and (c)
luminosity class III to V.
In recent years, HAEBE stars have gained considerable interest as the
possible progenitors of beta Pictoris and Vega-type stars, which are
intermediate-mass main-sequence objects surrounded by circumstellar
debris disks. Various arguments that the existence of these disks points
to the presence of planetary bodies open the possibility that the
environment of HAEBE stars is the site of current planet formation
(Waters & Waelkens 1998).
RR Tau, as one of the 26 stars on the list of Herbig (1960), shares all
points of the initial group definition. Its location in a small dark
cloud was noticed by Hoffmeister (1949); the bright nebulosity was
discovered by George Herbig himself in the early 1950's. The brightest
feature of this nebulosity is a knot about 14" east of the variable
star; from this knot and from the star two faint arcs run to about 50"
northward of RR Tau.
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| 15x15' field of view around RR Tau (the star in the middle) from the
Digitized Sky Survey. North is up; east is to the left. Note the extended
filamentary structures of faint nebulosities in the upper and the
right-hand sides of the image. (Credit: AURA, Inc.) |
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| A close-up view showing about 1x1' around RR Tau, taken with the Hubble
Space Telescope. The diffraction spikes point approximately towards
north-south and east-west. (Credit: D. Padgett, HST Proposal 9160) |
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These structures are clearly visible in the Digitized Sky Survey images
shown above. Further faint structures are extended towards the
northwest, where long filaments go well beyond the boundaries of the
image.
The bright knot in the nebulosity, which is, in principle, a relatively
easy target for CCD observers, was found to change in brightess by
Herbig (1960), thus its physical association to RR Tau is clearly
established. Recently, the Hubble Space Telescope captured the details
of this knot at an unprecedented level, revealing tiny filaments
apparently pointing away from the star. It is not yet clear what kind of
interactions take place between RR Tau and its immediate vicinity.
The variable star RR Tau: further acronyms on the way
Probably the most exciting feature of RR Tau (at least for AAVSO
observers) is its violent variability in the optical spectral region.
The full range of variation extends over 3 magnitudes with maxima at
10.6 mag and minima down to 13.8-14.0 mag. Moreover, the variations
occur on timescales as short as a day and are completely unpredictable!
To illustrate the point, we show the AAVSO light curve for four
consecutive seasons between 1997 and 2001. The apparent "scatter" of the
curve is actually quite misleading: it is the rapid day-to-day
variability that makes the light curve seemingly thick.
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| The visual light curve of RR Tau based on observations collected by the AAVSO.
Besides the seasonal gaps in the data, the plot clearly illustrates the
unpredictable variability of this star. |
A number of studies addressed photometric, polarimetric, and
spectroscopic variations of RR Tau (see the references below). The
emerging picture is the following. There are well-defined trends between
brightness, color, and polarization during the strong fadings that
dominate the light curve. As the star fades, it becomes redder, but in
the deepest minima the B-V color reverses, becoming bluer for V>13.0
mag. Photopolarimetry showed sharp increases in the percentage of
linearly polarized light during photometric minima, with stronger
polarization seen at shorter wavelengths. These characteristics (large,
aperiodic optical minima, reddening followed by a bluening at deepest
minima, and anticorrelated polarization) place RR Tau in the UXOR subclass
of HAEBE stars, named after the prototype UX Orionis.
Roughly one in every four HAEBEs belong to the UXOR group. Although they
were identified in the late 1960's (referred to as "Algol-type minima"
stars), the physical mechanism of variability is still rather
controversial. The leading model assumes that the minima are caused by
obscuration of the star by large orbiting circumstellar clouds
(Grinin 1988).
This theory explains well the bluening effect and increased
polarization in minima, both a result of increased percentage of
scattered starlight by dust during optical minima. However, the model
would require a nearly edge-on disk configuration if clouds are orbiting
in a Keplerian disk, which is not supported by independent estimates of
disk inclination angle. Another theory suggests that the obscuring
bodies are infalling "cometary" bodies, similar to the model developed
for the young main-sequence star beta Pictoris ("clumpy" accretion by
Graham 1992).
However, to reproduce the observed deep fadings, very
large dust comae (comparable to the size of the star) or a very large
number of them are required. A variation of the model assumes
instabilities in the circumstellar disk leading to variable obscuration
(Bertout 2000).
A fundamentally different model attributes the source of the photometric
variability to a variable accretion flow onto the star (Herbst &
Shevchenko 1999). In this model the dominant source of the optical
brightness is accretion luminosity. At maximum light we see the
optically thick surface of the accretion disk, while at optical minima,
the external accretion diminishes to the point that the disk becomes
transparent and we can see the underlying star. So this is in stark
contrast with the obscuration hypothesis: instead of assuming that the
brightest state represents the true luminosity of the star, the
accretion model implies that only at optical minima can we see the star
itself. In this respect, this model resembles the one that has been
widely accepted for the FU Orionis-type outbursts of young stars (known
as FUORs, see also FU Ori)
A recent spectroscopic study of RR Tau, which also made use of the
simultaneous AAVSO light curve (Rodgers et al. 2002), found supporting
evidence for the obscuration models, in which a featureless absorber
moves in and out of the line of sight, thus causing fadings and
rebrightenings. The obscuring screen acts as "nature's coronograph",
blocking the source of the continuum radiation and some portion of the
circumstellar environment. Interestingly, the majority of the
low-density wind exists outside of the obscured region. Rodgers et al.
(2002) concluded that the obscuration was caused by a dusty absorber
bigger than the star itself but still smaller than the circumstellar
envelope. However, apart from the general picture, not much is known
about the origin and fate of these dusty clouds, so that further
investigations should be performed before concluding that we understand
all important problems about RR Tau and its siblings.
Observing RR Tauri
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| The constellation Taurus from Johann Bayer's Uranometria (1603). 125 Tau, the
starting point of the star hop to RR Tau, is shown by the red mark roughly
half-way between the endpoints of the bullhorns (β and ζ Tauri).
(Credit: Linda Hall Library) |
RR Tau is a perfect observing target for every clear night with a
moderate-sized telescope that can go close to the inner sanctum ranges
(magnitude 13.8 or fainter) - that means a 6-to-10-inch telescope depending
on your light pollution. Since the variations are seemingly irregular
and completely unpredictable, it is worth following as often as
possible. Both the AAVSO c and d charts contain 125 Tau, which is a 5.2
mag star easily identifiable in as early publications as Johann Bayer's
Uranometria from 1603. Observers with CCD cameras may want to record the
image of the reflection nebula around RR Tau and its variations in time.
Good seeing for this is essential because the brightest knot of the
nebula is only a few arcseconds across.
RR Tau can be seen in a good portion of the year to northern observers
with winter as the best observing season. Due to its proximity to the
ecliptic plane, the star is unobservable between mid-May and early
August. For the same reason there can be monthly gaps when the Moon is
hanging around. Every other clear night could, however, bring surprising
turns in the brightness of the star, so that everyone interested can
start following RR Tau and its unexpected fadings. Observations may then
be submitted to the AAVSO, where they will be added to the 90-year
database for the star (the first observations go back to early 1917).
For those interested in this very interesting variable star, we wish
clear skies throughout the observing season - and way beyond!
For More Information
- AAVSO Standard Charts for 0533+26 RR Tau
- Bertout, C., 2000, Occultation of young stellar objects by circumstellar
disks. I. Theoretical expectations and preliminary comparison with observations,
Astronomy and Astrophysics, 363, 984
- Graham, J.A., 1992, Clumpy accretion onto pre-main-sequence stars,
Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, 104, 677
- Grinin, V.P., 1988, The origin of the blue emission observed in the deep
minima of young irregular variable stars, Pis'ma v Astronomicheskii Zhurnal, 14,
65
- Grinin, V.P., Kozlova, O.V., Thé, P.S., Rostopchina, A.N., 1996, The beta
Pictoris phenomenon among young stars. III. The Herbig Ae stars WW Vulpeculae,
RR Tauri and BF Orionis, Astronomy and Astrophysics, 309, 474
- Herbig, G.H., 1960, The spectra of Be- and Ae-type stars associated with
nebulosity, Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series, 4, 337
- Herbst, W., Shevchenko, V.S., 1999, A photometric catalog of Herbig Ae/Be
stars and discussion of the nature and cause of the variations of UX Orionis
stars, Astronomical Journal, 118, 1043
- Hoffmeister, C., 1949, Die RW Aurigae-Sterne und ihre Nebenformen,
Astronomische Nachrichten, 278, 24
- Liu, W.M., Hinz, P.M., Meyer, M.R., et al., 2007, Observations of Herbig Ae
Disks with Nulling Interferometry, Astrophysical Journal, in press
- Mayer, E.H., 1982, RR Tauri - alive and changing!, Journal of the AAVSO, 11,
74
- Multimission Archive at the Space Telescope Science Institute (MAST), a
gateway to space mission archives including those of the Hubble Space Telescope
- Padgett, Deborah, 2001, Disks end Envelopes of Nearby Nebulous Young Stellar
Objects: A Snapshot Survey, HST Proposal 9160
- Rodgers, B., Wooden, D.H., Grinin, V., et al., 2002, Spectroscopic
variabilty of the UXor star RR Tauri, Astrophysical Journal, 564, 405
- Rostopchina, A.N., Grinin, V.P., Okazaki, A., et al., 1997, Dust around
young
stars. Photopolarimetric activity of the classical Herbig Ae/Be star RR Tauri,
Astronomy and Astrophysics, 327, 145
- Silverman, S.M., Ward, Jr., F.W., Shapiro, R., 1971, Power spectrum
analysis
of the light curve of RR Tauri, Astrophysics and Space Science, 12, 319
- Waters, L.B.F.M., Waelkens, C, 1998, Herbig Ae/Be Stars, Annual Review of
Astronomy and Astrophysics, 36, 233
This season's Variable Star of the Season was prepared by Dr.
László Kiss, University of Sydney, Australia.
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