DIBS Independent of Accretion in T Tauri Stars
Ghandour, L. (UMass), Jenniskens, P. (NASA/Ames), & Hartigan, P. (Rice)
The examination of high resolution spectra (5200 - 7000 Angstroms) of 36
T Tauri stars ranging in accretion rates was performed. Only the lambda
lambda 5780, 5797, and 6613 bands were found detectable to within an
equivalent width of 10 micro Angstroms. They are strongest in DG Tau, DR
Tau, Dl Tau, and AS 353A. DR Tau was monitored over the course of four
years; during this time, the accretion rate varied by a factor of five,
but the equivalent widths of the DIB's (Diffuse Interstellar Bands)
remained constant. The lack of correlation of the strength of the bands
with the accretion rates implies that the bands are not directly
produced by UV radiation from the accretion process. The bands have line
strengths and ratios characteristic of the diffuse interstellar medium,
from which we conclude that the diffuse interstellar bands seen in the
spectra of T Tauri stars do not originate in the stars' immediate
environment. Instead, they are part of a foreground extinction, probably
due to the parent molecular cloud.
Journal of publication: 1994, The Diffuse Interstellar Bands: Contributed Papers p7-10.
(Ames:NASA)