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Featured researches published by R. D. Oudmaijer.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2001

EXPORT: Spectral classification and projected rotational velocities of Vega-type and pre-main sequence stars

A. Mora; Bruno Merín; E. Solano; B. Montesinos; D. de Winter; C. Eiroa; R. Ferlet; C. A. Grady; J. K. Davies; L. F. Miranda; R. D. Oudmaijer; J. Palacios; A. Quirrenbach; Alan W. Harris; H. Rauer; Andrew Collier Cameron; Hans J. Deeg; Francisco Garzon; Alan J. Penny; J. Schneider; Y. Tsapras; P. R. Wesselius

In this paper we present the rst comprehensive results extracted from the spectroscopic campaigns car- ried out by the EXPORT (EXoPlanetary Observational Research Team) consortium. During 1998{1999, EXPORT carried out an intensive observational eort in the framework of the origin and evolution of protoplanetary sys- tems in order to obtain clues on the evolutionary path from the early stages of the pre-main sequence to stars with planets already formed. The spectral types of 70 stars, and the projected rotational velocities, v sini ,o f 45 stars, mainly Vega-type and pre-main sequence, have been determined from intermediate- and high-resolution spectroscopy, respectively. The rst part of the work is of fundamental importance in order to accurately place the stars in the HR diagram and determine the evolutionary sequences; the second part provides information on the kinematics and dynamics of the stars and the evolution of their angular momentum. The advantage of using the same observational conguration and methodology for all the stars is the homogeneity of the set of pa- rameters obtained. Results from previous work are revised, leading in some cases to completely new determinations of spectral types and projected rotational velocities; for some stars no previous studies were available.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2002

Probing the circumstellar structure of Herbig Ae/Be stars

Jorick S. Vink; Janet E. Drew; Tim J. Harries; R. D. Oudmaijer

We present Hspectropolarimetry observations of a sample of 23 Herbig Ae/Be stars. A change in the linear polarisation across His detected in a large fraction of the objects, which indicates that the regions around Herbig stars are flattened (disc- like) on small scales. A second outcome of our study is that the spectropolarimetric signatures for the Ae stars differ from those of the Herbig Be stars, with characteristics changing from depolarisation across Hin the Herbig Be stars, to line polarisations in the Ae group. The frequency of depolarisations detected in the Herbig Be stars (7/12) is particularly interesting as, by analogy to classical Be stars, it may be the best evidence to date that the higher mass Herbig stars are surrounded by flattened structures. For the Herbig Ae stars, 9 out of 11 show a line polarisation effect that can be understood in terms of a compact Hemission that is itself polarised by a rotating disc-like circumstellar medium. The spectropolarimetric difference between the Herbig Be and Ae stars may be the first indication that there is a transition in the Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram from magnetic accretion at spectral type A to disc accretion at spectral type B. Alternatively, the interior polarised line emission apparent in the Ae stars may be masked in the Herbig Be stars due to their higher levels of Hemission.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2013

THE RED MSX SOURCE SURVEY: THE MASSIVE YOUNG STELLAR POPULATION OF OUR GALAXY

S. L. Lumsden; M. G. Hoare; J. S. Urquhart; R. D. Oudmaijer; Ben Davies; J. C. Mottram; H. D. B. Cooper; T. J. T. Moore

We present the Red MSX Source survey, the largest statistically selected catalog of young massive protostars and H II regions to date. We outline the construction of the catalog using mid- and near-infrared color selection. We also discuss the detailed follow up work at other wavelengths, including higher spatial resolution data in the infrared. We show that within the adopted selection bounds we are more than 90% complete for the massive protostellar population, with a positional accuracy of the exciting source of better than 2 arcsec. We briefly summarize some of the results that can be obtained from studying the properties of the objects in the catalog as a whole; we find evidence that the most massive stars form: (1) preferentially nearer the Galactic center than the anti-center; (2) in the most heavily reddened environments, suggestive of high accretion rates; and (3) from the most massive cloud cores.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2006

On the binarity of Herbig Ae/Be stars

Deborah Baines; R. D. Oudmaijer; John M. Porter; Monica Pozzo

We present high-resolution spectro-astrometry of a sample of 28 Herbig Ae/Be and three F-type pre-main-sequence stars. The spectro-astrometry, which is essentially the study of unresolved features in long-slit spectra, is shown from both empirical and simulated data to be capable of detecting binary companions that are fainter by up to 6 mag at separations larger than similar to 0.1 arcsec. The nine targets that were previously known to be binary are all detected. In addition, we report the discovery of six new binaries and present five further possible binaries. The resulting binary fraction is 68 +/- 11 per cent. This overall binary fraction is the largest reported for any observed sample of Herbig Ae/Be stars, presumably because of the exquisite sensitivity of spectro-astrometry for detecting binary systems. The data hint that the binary frequency of the Herbig Be stars is larger than that of the Herbig Ae stars. The Appendix presents model simulations to assess the capabilities of spectro-astrometry and reinforces the empirical findings. Most spectro-astrometric signatures in this sample of Herbig Ae/Be stars can be explained by the presence of a binary system. Two objects, HD 87643 and Z CMa, display evidence for asymmetric outflows. Finally, the position angles of the binary systems have been compared with available orientations of the circumprimary disc and these appear to be coplanar. The alignment between the circumprimary discs and the binary systems strongly suggests that the formation of binaries with intermediate-mass primaries is due to fragmentation as the alternative, stellar capture, does not naturally predict aligned discs. The alignment extends to the most massive B-type stars in our sample. This leads us to conclude that formation mechanisms that do result in massive stars, but predict random angles between the binaries and the circumprimary discs, such as stellar collisions, are also ruled out for the same reason.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2009

The RMS survey - 6 cm continuum VLA observations towards candidate massive YSOs in the northern hemisphere

J. S. Urquhart; M. G. Hoare; C. R. Purcell; S. L. Lumsden; R. D. Oudmaijer; T. J. T. Moore; A. L. Busfield; J. C. Mottram; Ben Davies

Context. The Red MSX Source (RMS) survey is an ongoing multi-wavelength observational programme designed to return a large, well-selected sample of massive young stellar objects (MYSOs). We have identified ∼2000 MYSO candidates located throughout the Galaxy by comparing the colours of MSX and 2MASS point sources to those of known MYSOs. The aim of these follow-up observations is to identify other objects with similar colours such as ultra compact (UC) HII regions, evolved stars and planetary nebulae (PNe) and distinguish between genuine MYSOs and nearby low-mass YSOs. Aims. To identify the populations of UCHII regions and PNe within the sample and examine their Galactic distribution. Methods. We have conducted high resolution radio continuum observations at 6 cm towards 659 MYSO candidates in the northern hemisphere (10 ◦ < l < 250 ◦ ) using the Very Large Array (VLA). These observations have a spatial resolution of ∼1–2 �� and typical image rms noise values of ∼0.22 mJy – sensitive enough to detect a HII region powered by B0.5 star at the far side of the Galaxy. In addition to these targeted observations we present archival data towards a further 315 RMS sources extracted from a previous VLA survey of the inner Galaxy. Results. We present the results of radio continuum observations made towards 974 MYSO candidates, 272 (∼27% of the observed sample) of which are found to be associated with radio emission above a 4σ detection limit (∼1 mJy). Using results from other parts of our multi-wavelength survey we separate these RMS-radio associations into two distinct types of objects, classifying 51 as PNe and a further 208 as either compact or UC HII regions. Including all HII regions and PNe identified either from the literature or from the multi-wavelength data these numbers increase to 391 and 79, respectively. Using this well selected sample of HII regions we estimate their Galactic scale height to be 0.6 ◦ . In addition to the RMS-radio associations we are able to set upper limits on the radio emission of ≤1 mJy for the 702 non-detections, which is below the level expected if they had already begun to ionise their surroundings. Conclusions. Using radio continuum and archival data we have identified 79 PNe and 391 HII regions within the northern RMS catalogue. We estimate the total fraction of contamination by PNe in the RMS sample is of order 10%. The sample of HII regions is probably the best representation to date of the Galactic population of HII regions as a whole.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2002

On the simultaneous optical and near-infrared variability of pre-main sequence stars

C. Eiroa; R. D. Oudmaijer; J. K. Davies; D. de Winter; Francisco Garzon; J. Palacios; A. Alberdi; R. Ferlet; C. A. Grady; Andrew Collier Cameron; Hans J. Deeg; Alan W. Harris; K. Horne; Bruno Merín; L. F. Miranda; B. Montesinos; A. Mora; Alan J. Penny; A. Quirrenbach; H. Rauer; Jakob P. Schneider; E. Solano; Y. Tsapras; P. R. Wesselius

For a complete understanding of the physical processes causing the photometric variability of pre-main sequence systems, simultaneous optical and near-IR observations are required to disentangle the emission from the stars and that from their associated circumstellar disks. Data of this sort are extremely rare and little systematic work has been reported to date. The work presented in this paper is a systematic attempt in this direction. It presents an analysis of the simultaneous optical and near-IR photometric variability of 18 Herbig Ae/Be and T Tauri stars which were observed in October 98 by the EXPORT collaboration. The time dierence between the UBVRI and JHK measurements is less than 1 hour in50% of the data and the largest dierence is around 2 hours in only10% of the data. Twelve stars appear to show a correlation between the optical and near-IR variability trends, which suggests a common physical origin such as spots and/or variable extinction. The optical and near-IR variability is uncorrelated in the rest of the objects, which suggests it originates in distinctly dierent regions. In general, the optical variability qualitatively follows the predictions of starspots or variable extinction. As far as the near-IR is concerned, the simultaneity of the observations demonstrates that for most objects the flux is largely produced by their circumstellar disks and, consequently, in many cases the near-IR fluctuations must be attributed to structural variations of such disks producing variations of their thermal emission and/or scattered light. The observed near-IR changes of up to around 1 mag on timescales of 1{2 days provide interesting challenges for understanding the mechanisms generating such remarkable variabilities, an issue insuciently investigated until now but one which deserves further theoretical and modeling eorts.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2013

The Coordinated Radio and Infrared Survey for High-mass Star Formation. II. Source Catalog

C. R. Purcell; M. G. Hoare; W. D. Cotton; S. L. Lumsden; J. S. Urquhart; Claire J. Chandler; E. Churchwell; Philip J. Diamond; S. M. Dougherty; R. P. Fender; G. A. Fuller; S. T. Garrington; T. M. Gledhill; Paul F. Goldsmith; L. Hindson; James M. Jackson; S. Kurtz; J. Martí; T. J. T. Moore; Lee G. Mundy; T. W. B. Muxlow; R. D. Oudmaijer; Jagadheep D. Pandian; J. M. Paredes; D. S. Shepherd; S Smethurst; R. E. Spencer; M. A. Thompson; Grazia Umana; Albert A. Zijlstra

The CORNISH project is the highest resolution radio continuum survey of the Galactic plane to date. It is the 5 GHz radio continuum part of a series of multi-wavelength surveys that focus on the northern GLIMPSE region (10° < l < 65°), observed by the Spitzer satellite in the mid-infrared. Observations with the Very Large Array in B and BnA configurations have yielded a 1.″5 resolution Stokes I map with a root mean square noise level better than 0.4 mJy beam -1 . Here we describe the data-processing methods and data characteristics, and present a new, uniform catalog of compact radio emission. This includes an implementation of automatic deconvolution that provides much more reliable imaging than standard CLEANing. A rigorous investigation of the noise characteristics and reliability of source detection has been carried out. We show that the survey is optimized to detect emission on size scales up to 14″ and for unresolved sources the catalog is more than 90% complete at a flux density of 3.9 mJy. We have detected 3062 sources above a 7σ detection limit and present their ensemble properties. The catalog is highly reliable away from regions containing poorly sampled extended emission, which comprise less than 2% of the survey area. Imaging problems have been mitigated by down-weighting the shortest spacings and potential artifacts flagged via a rigorous manual inspection with reference to the Spitzer infrared data. We present images of the most common source types found: H II regions, planetary nebulae, and radio galaxies. The CORNISH data and catalog are available online at http://cornish.leeds.ac.uk.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2011

Accretion rates and accretion tracers of Herbig Ae/Be stars

I. Mendigutía; Nuria Calvet; B. Montesinos; A. Mora; James Muzerolle; C. Eiroa; R. D. Oudmaijer; Bruno Merín

Context. The scarcity of accretion rate estimates and accretion tracers available for Herbig Ae/Be (HAeBe) stars contrasts with the extensive studies for lower mass objects. Aims. This work aims to derive accretion rates from the UV Balmer excess for a sample of 38 HAeBe stars. We look for possible empirical correlations with the strength of the Hα ,( Oi)6300, and Brγ emission lines. Methods. Shock modelling within the context of magnetospheric accretion (MA) was applied to each star. We obtained the accretion rates from the excess in the Balmer discontinuity, derived from mean values of multi-epoch Johnsons UBphotometry. The accretion rates were related to both mean Hα luminosities, Hα 10% widths, and (O i)6300 luminosities from simultaneous spectra, and to Brγ luminosities from the literature. Results. The typical -median- mass accretion rate is 2 × 10 −7 Myr −1 in our sample, 36% of the stars showing values ≤10 −7 Myr −1 , 35% between 10 −7 and 10 −6 , and 29% > 10 −6 Myr −1 . The model fails to reproduce the large Balmer excesses shown by the four hottest stars (T∗ > 12 000 K). When accretion is related to the stellar masses and luminosities (1 ≤ M∗/M� ≤ 6; 2 ≤ L∗/L� ≤ 10 3 ), we derive u Macc ∝ M 5 and Lacc ∝ L 1.2 ∗ , with scatter. Empirical calibrations relating the accretion and the Hα ,( Oi)6300, and Brγ luminosities are provided. The slopes in our expressions are slightly shallower than those for lower mass stars, but the difference is within the uncertainties, except for the (O i)6300 line. The Hα 10% width is uncorrelated with u Macc, unlike for the lower mass regime. The mean Hα width shows higher values as the projected rotational velocities of HAe stars increase, which agrees with MA. The accretion rate variations in the sample are typically lower than 0.5 dex on timescales of days to months. Our data suggest that the changes in the Balmer excess are uncorrelated to the simultaneous changes of the line luminosities. Conclusions. The Balmer excesses and Hα line widths of HAe stars can be interpreted within the context of MA, which is not the case for several HBes. The steep trend relating u Macc and M∗ can be explained from the mass-age distribution characterizing HAeBe stars. The line luminosities used for low-mass objects are also valid to estimate typical accretion rates for the intermediate-mass regime under similar empirical expressions. However, we suggest that several of these calibrations are driven by the stellar luminosity.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2007

The RMS survey : Radio observations of candidate massive YSOs in the southern hemisphere

J. S. Urquhart; A. L. Busfield; M. G. Hoare; S. L. Lumsden; A. J. Clarke; T. J. T. Moore; J. C. Mottram; R. D. Oudmaijer

The Red MSX Source (RMS) survey is a multi-wavelength program of follow-up observations designed to distinguish between genuine massive young stellar objects (MYSOs) and other embedded or dusty objects, such as ultra compact (UC) HII regions, evolved stars and planetary nebulae (PNe). We have identified nearly 2000 massive YSOs candidates by comparing the colours of MSX and 2MASS point sources to those of known MYSOs. Unfortunately, there are several other types of embedded or dust enshrouded objects that have similar colours as MYSOs and contaminate our sample. Two sources of contamination are from UCHII regions and PNe, both of which can be identified from the radio emission emitted by their ionised nebulae. In order to identify UCHII regions and PNe that contaminate our sample we have conducted high resolution radio continuum observations at 3.6 and 6 cm of all southern MYSOs candidates (


Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2012

The Coordinated Radio and Infrared Survey for High-Mass Star Formation (The CORNISH Survey). I. Survey Design

M. G. Hoare; C. R. Purcell; E. Churchwell; Philip J. Diamond; W. D. Cotton; Claire J. Chandler; S Smethurst; S. Kurtz; Lee G. Mundy; S. M. Dougherty; R. P. Fender; G. A. Fuller; James M. Jackson; S. T. Garrington; T R Gledhill; Paul F. Goldsmith; Stuart Lumsden; J. Martí; T. J. T. Moore; T. W. B. Muxlow; R. D. Oudmaijer; Jagadheep D. Pandian; J. M. Paredes; D. S. Shepherd; R. E. Spencer; M. A. Thompson; Grazia Umana; J. S. Urquhart; Albert A. Zijlstra

235< l < 350

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T. J. T. Moore

Liverpool John Moores University

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J. C. Mottram

University of British Columbia

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Ben Davies

Liverpool John Moores University

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Janet E. Drew

University of Hertfordshire

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B. Montesinos

Spanish National Research Council

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W. J. de Wit

European Southern Observatory

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