T Tauri stars (TTS) can be defined as low-mass (up to 3 ), late
spectral type (later than mid-F) and variable pre-main sequence stars with
relatively young age (from 105 yrs to a few 107 yrs). Weak-line T
Tauri stars (WTTS), unlike classical T Tauri stars (CTTS) which are
characterized by strong optical emission lines, ultraviolet and infrared
excesses, are believed to be relatively devoid of circumstellar matter.
Taurus-Auriga is one of the best studied ongoing low-mass Star Forming
Regions (SFR) with a distance of
140 pc. About 150 TTS were known
prior to the ROSAT mission in the surrounding area of the T association,
most of which are listed in the Herbig-Bell catalog (Herbig & Bell
1988), and nearly all CTTS have been previously discovered by their
conspicuous optical characteristics. Since WTTS are intrinsically more X-ray
luminous than CTTS (Neuhäuser et al. 1995a) and thus are
much easier detected by the spatially unbiased ROSAT All Sky Survey (RASS),
the advent of the RASS offers for the first time the opportunity to extend
the search for X-ray active WTTS in nearby SFRs, with a flux limit
comparable with typical EO pointed observations. So far,
70 previously
unknown WTTS candidates have been uncovered in the central part of the
Taurus-Auriga SFR (Wichmann et al. 1996). Furthermore, 15 WTTS
candidates (Neuhäuser et al. 1995c) and later 30 more WTTS
candidates (Magazzú et al. 1997) have been identified to the
south of the Taurus molecular clouds on the basis of RASS data and
follow-up optical observations. A few TTS candidates have also been
discovered sporadically in deep ROSAT pointed observations in Taurus-Auriga
(Strom & Strom 1994; Carkner et al. 1996;
Wichmann et al. 1996).
The release of the RASS Bright Source Catalog (RASS-BSC) (Voges et al.
1996) has enabled us to study the surroundings of Taurus-Auriga
to reveal more WTTS. A complete sample of X-ray sources selected from
RASS-BSC were identified using ground-based optical follow-up
observations. Low-resolution spectroscopic observations have been
carried out to discriminate late type optical counterparts from early
type stars and galaxies in the error box of the RASS, and to estimate
their visual magnitudes at the time of observation.
Intermediate-resolution spectroscopy of the late type stars then
followed to investigate their proper spectral types and to measure
H and LiI equivalent widths. The identification of the RASS
sources and the discovery of new WTTS candidates in the Taurus-Auriga
SFR are concerned in this paper.
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