Star Formation

T Tauri Phase

Pre-main-sequence stars — young, cool, large, surrounded by protoplanetary disks

The T Tauri phase is the pre-main-sequence stage for low-to-intermediate mass stars (<2 M_sun). Age ~1-10 Myr. Star has finished accretion phase but hasn't yet started hydrogen fusion. Cool surface (~3000-4000 K) but large radius — luminous. Often surrounded by protoplanetary disk. Strong magnetic activity, X-ray emission, jets, outflows. T Tauri itself: prototype star (in Taurus constellation). All sun-like stars went through this phase. Ends when star reaches main sequence (~30-50 Myr for Sun-like).

  • Age range~1-10 Myr (pre-main-sequence)
  • Mass range<2 M_sun (low/intermediate)
  • Surface T3000-4000 K (cool)
  • ActivityStrong magnetic; X-ray; flares
  • DiskOften present; protoplanetary
  • DiscoveryJoy 1942 — variable star T Tauri

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Why T Tauri matter

  • Star formation. Critical phase of stellar evolution.
  • Planet formation. Disk dispersal sets planet timing.
  • Solar system origin. Sun's history during this phase.
  • Stellar magnetism. Strong activity tests dynamo theory.
  • Exoplanet atmospheres. Stellar UV affects formation.
  • Astrobiology. Planet conditions during T Tauri.
  • Stellar populations. Young populations in star clusters.

Common misconceptions

  • T Tauri are mature stars. Pre-main-sequence; very young.
  • T Tauri are dim. Often more luminous than main sequence equivalent.
  • T Tauri are unique. All sun-like stars went through this.
  • Disks indicate immature. Many T Tauris are disk-less (after dispersal).
  • T Tauri activity is normal. Much higher than main sequence Sun.
  • T Tauri are stable. Variable; magnetic activity high.

Frequently asked questions

What's a T Tauri star?

Pre-main-sequence star (1-10 Myr old). M < 2 M_sun. Source: collapsing molecular cloud → accretion phase → T Tauri phase → main sequence. Star contracting; not yet fusing hydrogen. Large radius (vs eventual main sequence size). Cool surface but high luminosity. Active magnetic field; X-ray bright; spots; flares.

What's the Hertzsprung-Russell tracks?

T Tauri stars start cool and luminous. Contract: T rises. Hayashi track (vertical, downward in HR diagram): nearly constant T. Henyey track (rightward, almost horizontal): higher T as nuclear ignition approaches. Reaches main sequence when core T = 10⁷ K — H burning begins.

What's special about T Tauri activity?

Strong magnetic activity. X-ray emission ~1000× modern Sun. Frequent flares (~daily). Stellar spots. Jets and outflows (bipolar — perpendicular to disk). Variable brightness. UV bright. Contributes to atmospheric chemistry of forming exoplanets. Strong winds.

What's a protoplanetary disk?

Disk of gas + dust around T Tauri. Persists ~10⁵-10⁷ years before dispersal. Source: angular momentum from collapse. Where planets form. Mass: ~0.01 M_sun typical; varies. Composition mostly H/He gas + dust. Viewed: ALMA and Hubble image disks; JWST reveals structures.

How were T Tauri stars discovered?

Joy (1942). Studied variable star T Tauri (in constellation Taurus). Found similar stars: extreme variability, association with nebulosity, low T but high L. Established class of "T Tauri" stars. Now: archetype for pre-main-sequence stars in this mass range.

What about higher-mass stars?

Different name. Massive pre-main-sequence stars (2-10 M_sun): Herbig Ae/Be stars. Different evolution due to hotter, more rapid contraction. Less time on Hayashi track. Different observational properties. Massive stars: very brief pre-main-sequence (~10⁵-10⁶ yr).

What was Sun's T Tauri phase like?

~30-50 Myr ago Sun was on T Tauri phase. Probably very active — X-ray bright, flares, mass loss. Solar nebula present. Planets accreting. Earth's atmosphere (and other terrestrial planets') heavily affected by Sun's strong UV/X-ray radiation. Some atmospheric loss; some chemical processing.