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An Asymmetric Eclipse Seen Towards the Pre-Main Sequence Binary System V928 Tau

Authors :
van Dam, Dirk
Kenworthy, Matthew
David, Trevor
Mamajek, Eric
Hillenbrand, Lynne
Cody, Anne Marie
Howard, Andrew
Isaacson, Howard
Ciardi, David
Rebull, Luisa
Stauffer, John
Patel, Rahul
Cameron, Andrew Collier
Rodriguez, Joseph
Pojmański, Grzegorz
Gonzales, Erica
Schlieder, Joshua
Hambsch, Franz-Josef
Dufoer, Sjoerd
Vanmunster, Tonny
Dubois, Franky
Vanaverbeke, Siegfried
Logie, Ludwig
Rau, Steve
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

K2 observations of the weak-lined T Tauri binary V928 Tau A+B show the detection of a single, asymmetric eclipse which may be due to a previously unknown substellar companion eclipsing one component of the binary with an orbital period $>$ 66 days. Over an interval of about 9 hours, one component of the binary dims by around 60%, returning to its normal brightness about 5 hours later. From modeling of the eclipse shape we find evidence that the eclipsing companion may be surrounded by a disk or a vast ring system. The modeled disk has a radius of $0.9923\,\pm\,0.0005\,R_*$, with an inclination of $56.78\,\pm\, 0.03^\circ$, a tilt of $41.22\,\pm\,0.05^\circ$, an impact parameter of $-0.2506\,\pm\,0.0002\,R_*$ and an opacity of 1.00. The occulting disk must also move at a transverse velocity of $6.637\,\pm\,0.002\,R_*\,\mathrm{day}^{-1}$, which depending on whether it orbits V928 Tau A or B, corresponds to approximately 73.53 or 69.26 $\mathrm{km s}^{-1}$. A search in ground based archival data reveals additional dimming events, some of which suggest periodicity, but no unambiguous period associated with the eclipse observed by K2. We present a new epoch of astrometry which is used to further refine the orbit of the binary, presenting a new lower bound of 67 years, and constraints on the possible orbital periods of the eclipsing companion. The binary is also separated by 18" ($\sim$2250 au) from the lower mass CFHT-BD-Tau 7, which is likely associated with V928 Tau A+B. We also present new high dispersion optical spectroscopy that we use to characterize the unresolved stellar binary.<br />Comment: 30 pages, 9 tables, 10 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ, GitHub repository for scripts and figures on https://github.com/dmvandam/v928tau

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2010.11199
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/abc259