COPIOUS AMOUNTS OF HOT AND COLD DUST ORBITING THE MAIN SEQUENCE A-TYPE STARS HD 131488 AND HD 121191
Authors:
Melis et al.
Abstract:
We report two new dramatically dusty main sequence stars: HD 131488 (A1 V) and HD 121191 (A8 V). HD 131488 is found to have substantial amounts of dust in its terrestrial planet zone (L IR/L bol ≈ 4 × 10–3), cooler dust farther out in its planetary system, and an unusual mid-infrared spectral feature. HD 121191 shows terrestrial planet zone dust (L IR/L bol ≈ 2.3 × 10–3), hints of cooler dust, and shares the unusual mid-infrared spectral shape identified in HD 131488. These two stars belong to sub-groups of the Scorpius-Centaurus OB association and have ages of ~10 Myr. HD 131488 and HD 121191 are the dustiest main sequence A-type stars currently known. Early-type stars that host substantial inner planetary system dust are thus far found only within the age range of 5-20 Myr.
Thursday, October 31, 2013
Planetary Systems Seem to be Forming Around Class A Stars HD 131488 and HD 121191
Labels:
astronomy,
exoplanets,
planetary formation
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment