What can X-rays tell us about accretion, mass loss and magnetic fields in young stars?

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Abstract

Abstract Until recently, X-rays from low-mass young stars (10 5106 yr) were thought to be a universal proxy for magnetic activity, enhanced by 3-4 orders of magnitude with respect to the Sun, but otherwise similar in nature to all low-mass, late-type convective stars (including the Sun itself). However, there is now evidence that other X-ray emission mechanisms are at work in young stars. The most frequently invoked mechanism is accretion shocks along magnetic field lines (magnetic accretion). In the case of the more massive A- and B-type stars, and their progenitors the Herbig AeBe stars, other, possibly more exotic mechanisms can operate: star-disk magnetic reconnection, magnetically channeled shocked winds, etc. In any case, magnetic fields, both on small scale (surface activity) and on large scale (dipolar magnetospheres), play a distinctive role in the emission of X-rays by young stars, probably throughout the IMF. © 2007 International Astronomical Union.

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APA

Montmerle, T. (2007). What can X-rays tell us about accretion, mass loss and magnetic fields in young stars? In Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union (Vol. 3, pp. 23–30). https://doi.org/10.1017/S1743921307009386

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