X-ray observations of Star Forming Regions: how far, how old (and how often) | Ignazio Pillitteri (INAF-OAPa)
I will present results from my recent papers based on XMM-Newton observations of young stars in Star Forming Regions near Orion A (Kappa Ori) and Rho Ophiuchi. These observations were aimed at discovering new young stars and infer their ages, their distances and the relationship with the parent cloud. In Kappa Ori, with 40 ks of XMM/EPIC we have derived X-ray fluxes and luminosities of about 120 young stars with and without disks near Kappa Ori (B0 type). X-ray luminosity functions provided a “yardstick” to infer that these stars form a separate cluster centered on Kappa Ori (~250 pc), much closer than ONC (~410 pc) and unrelated to it. In Rho Ophiuchi, with 50+140 ks we have discovered a group of disk-less stars around Rho Oph itself and significantly older (5-10 Myr) than the bulk of YSOs (1 Myr) in the main core of the cloud, L1688. As an unexpected discovery, Rho Oph itself is a periodic emitter of hard X-rays, mimicking a “X-ray lighthouse”, and hinting that either a strong magnetism or an unseen companion are the source of such X-rays.