Variable accretion as a mechanism for brightness variations in T Tau S
Roy van Boekel, Attila Juhasz, Thomas Henning, Rainer Koehler,, Thorsten Ratzka, Tom Herbst, Jeroen Bouwman, and Willy Kley

TL;DR
This study investigates the cause of brightness variations in T Tau Sa, demonstrating that short-term fluctuations are due to variable accretion rather than foreground extinction, supported by radiative transfer modeling and variability timescale analysis.
Contribution
The paper provides a diagnostic method using variability timescales to distinguish between accretion-driven and extinction-driven brightness changes in T Tau Sa.
Findings
Short-term variability (within days) is caused by variable accretion.
Foreground extinction cannot explain rapid brightness changes due to velocity constraints.
Long-term brightness variations may involve both accretion and foreground extinction.
Abstract
(Note: this is a shortened version of the original A&A-style structured abstract). The physical nature of the strong photometric variability of T Tau Sa, the more massive member of the Southern "infrared companion" to T Tau, has long been debated. Intrinsic luminosity variations due to variable accretion were originally proposed but later challenged in favor of apparent fluctuations due to time-variable foreground extinction. In this paper we use the timescale of the variability as a diagnostic for the underlying physical mechanism. Because the IR emission emerging from Sa is dominantly thermal emission from circumstellar dust at <=1500K, we can derive a minimum size of the region responsible for the time-variable emission. In the context of the variable foreground extinction scenario, this region must be (un-) covered within the variability timescale, which implies a minimum velocity…
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