1 Institute for Astronomy, K.U. Leuven, Belgium
Recent ISO-results have shown that, besides the so-called 'astronomical silicate' (which is amorphous), several young stars also show crystalline silicates. Surprisingly, also meteors, comets and interplanetary dust particles show crystalline silicates. Here we present ISO-SWS observations of a large sample of isolated Herbig Ae/Be stars, covering a wide range in spectral type (B9-K4). These spectra reveal an amazing variety in spectral features, such as PAH's, water ice and silicates. Amorphous silicates are seen at 9.7 and 18m, while crystalline silicates, such as forsterite (20, 24 and 34m), olivines (28m) and pyroxenes (43m) are seen aswell. An intruiging fact is that some stars show amorphous silicate (9.7m) in emission, while others show it in absorption. This was already revealed by IRAS (Bhatt. H.C. and Gorti U., 1993, BASI 21,541). We measured and identified features for a group of 34 young stellar objects, from which most are Herbig Ae/Be stars. We have already studied a large group of our sources through optical spectra and UV-IR photometry. These data reveal information about the abundances of the stellar atmosphere, outflow/accretion, CS extinction, inclination of the CS disk and age. Our findings are now confronted with properties of the CS dust. Correlation between strength, structure and presence of features on one hand and spectral type, E(B-V), presence of accretion/outflow, chemical composition and evolutionary stadium on the other hand, are looked for. From the ISO-SWS spectra, we can distinguish five groups, which may also be a distinction in evolutionary status. Preliminary results from our program will be presented.