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The Rotation of Young Low-Mass Stars and Brown Dwarfs

Authors :
Herbst, W.
Eislöffel, J.
Mundt, R.
Aleks Scholz
Source :
NASA Astrophysics Data System
Publication Year :
2006
Publisher :
arXiv, 2006.

Abstract

We review the current state of our knowledge concerning the rotation and angular momentum evolution of young stellar objects and brown dwarfs from a primarily observational view point. Periods are typically accurate to 1% and available for about 1700 stars and 30 brown dwarfs in young clusters. Discussion of angular momentum evolution also requires knowledge of stellar radii, which are poorly known for pre-main sequence stars. It is clear that rotation rates at a given age depend strongly on mass; higher mass stars (0.4-1.2 M$_\odot$) have longer periods than lower mass stars and brown dwarfs. On the other hand, specific angular momentum is approximately independent of mass for low mass pre-main sequence stars and young brown dwarfs. A spread of about a factor of 30 is seen at any given mass and age. The evolution of rotation of solar-like stars during the first 100 Myr is discussed. A broad, bimodal distribution exists at the earliest observable phases ($\sim$1 Myr) for stars more massive than 0.4 M$_\odot$. The rapid rotators (50-60% of the sample) evolve to the ZAMS with little or no angular momentum loss. The slow rotators continue to lose substantial amounts of angular momentum for up to 5 Myr, creating the even broader bimodal distribution characteristic of 30-120 Myr old clusters. Accretion disk signatures are more prevalent among slowly rotating PMS stars, indicating a connection between accretion and rotation. Disks appear to influence rotation for, at most, $\sim$5 Myr, and considerably less than that for the majority of stars. If the dense clusters studied so far are an accurate guide, then the typical solar-like star may have only $\sim$1 Myr for this task. It appears that both disk interactions and stellar winds are less efficient at braking these objects.<br />Comment: Review chapter for Protostars and Planets V. 15 page and 8 figures

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
NASA Astrophysics Data System
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b0377dae8017746005723554961bfede
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.astro-ph/0603673