Chamaeleon
Abstract
The dark clouds in the constellation of Chamaeleon have distances of 160-180 pc from the Sun and a total mass of ~5000 M_sun. The three main clouds, Cha I, II, and III, have angular sizes of a few square degrees and maximum extinctions of A_V=5-10. Most of the star formation in these clouds is occurring in Cha I, with the remainder in Cha II. The current census of Cha I contains 237 known members, 33 of which have spectral types indicative of brown dwarfs (>M6). Approximately 50 members of Cha II have been identified, including a few brown dwarfs. When interpreted with the evolutionary models of Chabrier and Baraffe, the H-R diagram for Cha I exhibits a median age of ~2 Myr, making it coeval with IC 348 and slightly older than Taurus (~1 Myr). The IMF of Cha I reaches a maximum at a mass of 0.1-0.15 M_sun, and thus closely resembles the IMFs in IC 348 and the Orion Nebula Cluster. The disk fraction in Cha I is roughly constant at ~50% from 0.01 to 0.3 M_sun and increases to ~65% at higher masses. In comparison, IC 348 has a similar disk fraction at low masses but a much lower disk fraction at M>1 M_sun, indicating that solar-type stars have longer disk lifetimes in Cha I.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0808.3207,
title = {Chamaeleon},
author = {Kevin L. Luhman},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0808.3207},
year = {2008}
}
Comments
to appear in the Handbook of Star Forming Regions, ASP Monograph Series