Artículos de revistas
The TW Hydrae association: trigonometric paralaxes and kinematic analysis
Fecha
2014Registro en:
Astronomy & Astrophysics, Les Ulis, v. 563, p. 121/1-121/15, 2014
0004-6361
10.1051/0004-6361/201322075
Autor
Ducourant, Christine
Teixeira, Ramachrisna
Galli, Phillip Andreas Brenner
Campion, J. F. Le
Martins, Alberto Garcez de Oliveira Krone
Zuckerman, B.
Chauvin, G.
Song, I.
Institución
Resumen
Context. The nearby TW Hydrae association (TWA) is currently a benchmark for the study of the formation and evolution of young
low-mass stars, circumstellar disks, and the imaging detection of planetary companions. For these studies, it is crucial to evaluate
the distance to group members in order to access their physical properties. Membership of several stars is strongly debated and age
estimates vary from one author to another with doubts about coevality.
Aims. We revisit the kinematic properties of the TWA in light of new trigonometric parallaxes and proper motions to derive the
dynamical age of the association and physical parameters of kinematic members.
Methods. Using observations performed with the New Technology Telescope (NTT) from ESO we measured trigonometric parallaxes
and proper motions for 13 stars in TWA.
Results. With the convergent point method we identify a co-moving group with 31 TWA stars. We deduce kinematic distances for
seven members of the moving group that lack trigonometric parallaxes. A traceback strategy is applied to the stellar space motions
of a selection of 16 of the co-moving objects with accurate and reliable data yielding a dynamical age for the association of t '
7:5 0:7 Myr. Using our new parallaxes and photometry available in the literature we derive stellar ages and masses from theoretical
evolutionary models.
Conclusions. With new parallax and proper motion measurements from this work and current astrometric catalogs we provide an
improved and accurate database for TWA stars to be used in kinematical analysis. We conclude that the dynamical age obtained via
traceback strategy is consistent with previous age estimates for the TWA, and is also compatible with the average ages derived in the
present paper from evolutionary models for pre-main-sequence stars