Abstract

CTTSs are young stars accreting mass from their circumstellar disks. The material falls into the star at free fall velocity and hits the stellar surface producing shocks, that heat the plasma at few million degrees. In the last twenty years the X-ray and UV observations of these systems have raised several questions. In particular, the observed X-ray luminosity is systematically below the value predicted by theoretical models, and the UV lines show complex profiles which cannot be easily interpreted with current accretion models based only on magnetohydrodynamical effects. To tackle these problems we modeled the structure and the dynamics of the plasma in the impact region using 3D magnetohydrodynamical simulations, but including the effects of radiative transport, for the first time in the Non Local Thermodynamical Equilibrium (NLTE) regime. We found that the radiation arising from the shocked plasma is partially absorbed by the unshocked accretion column, and this might explain the excess of X-ray flux predicted by MHD models which do not include absorption effects. Moreover, due to the absorption of radiation, the pre-shock downfalling accreted material is gradually heated up to a few 105 K due to irradiation of X-rays arising from the shocked plasma at the impact region. We discuss the implication of this pre-shock heating for the UV and X-ray emission arising from the impact region.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call