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Accretion variability in young, low-mass stellar systems

Through the study of accretion onto the young, low-mass stars known as T Tauri Stars (TTS), we can better understand the formation of our solar system. Gas is funneled along stellar magnetic field lines into magnetospheric accretion columns where it reaches free-fall velocities and shocks at the stellar surface, generating emission that carries information about the inner regions of the protoplanetary disk. Accretion is a variable process, with characteristic timescales ranging from minutes to years. In this dissertation, I use simulations, models, and observations to provide insight into the driving forces of mass accretion rate variability on timescales of minutes to weeks and the structure of the inner disk. Using hydrodynamic simulations, I find that steady-state, transonic accretion occurs naturally in the absence of any other source of variability. If the density in the inner disk varies smoothly in time with roughly day-long time-scales (e.g., due to turbulence), traveling shocks develop within the accretion column, which lead to rapid increases in the accretion luminosity followed by slower declines. I present the largest Hubble Space Telescope (HST) spectral variability study of TTS to date. I infer mass accretion rates and accretion column surface coverage using newly updated accretion shock models. I find typical changes in the mass accretion rate of order 10% and moderate changes in the surface coverage for most objects in the sample on week timescales. Individual peculiar epochs are further discussed. I find that the inner disk is inhomogeneous and that dust may survive near the magnetic truncation radius. Next, I link 2-minute cadence light curves from the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) to accretion using ground-based U-band photometry. Additional HST observations for one target enable more detailed connections between TESS light curves and accretion. I also use the TESS light curves to identify rotation periods and patterns of quasi-periodicity. Finally, I connect hydrodynamic simulations, accretion shock models, and stellar rotation to predict signatures of a turbulent inner disk. I generate light curves from these models to make comparisons to previous month-long photometric monitoring surveys of TTS using metrics of light curve symmetry and periodicity.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bu.edu/oai:open.bu.edu:2144/42027
Date11 February 2021
CreatorsRobinson, Connor Edward
ContributorsEspaillat, Catherine C.
Source SetsBoston University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis/Dissertation
RightsAttribution 4.0 International, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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