Recurring millimeter flares as evidence for star-star magnetic reconnection events in the DQ Tauri PMS binary system
D.M. Salter (Leiden), \'A. K\'osp\'al (Leiden), K.V. Getman (Penn, State), M.R. Hogerheijde (Leiden), T.A. van Kempen (Harvard-CfA), J.M., Carpenter (Caltech), G.A. Blake (Caltech), and D. Wilner (Harvard-CfA)

TL;DR
This study presents evidence of periodic millimeter flares in the DQ Tau binary system, supporting the hypothesis that magnetic reconnection between stellar magnetospheres near periastron causes these flares, with implications for magnetic field structure and accretion processes.
Contribution
The paper provides the first evidence of periodic millimeter flares in DQ Tau linked to magnetic reconnection events at periastron, with detailed analysis of flare properties and magnetic field implications.
Findings
Flares occur near periastron within 17.5 hours
Flare duration is approximately 30 hours
Magnetic reconnection likely causes the flares
Abstract
Observations of the T Tauri spectroscopic binary DQ Tau in April 2008 captured an unusual flare at 3 mm, which peaked at an observed max flux of 0.5 Jy (about 27x the quiescent value). Here we present follow-up mm observations that demonstrate a periodicity to the phenomenon. While monitoring 3 new periastron encounters, we detect flares within 17.5 hrs (or 4.6%) of the orbital phase of the first reported flare, and we constrain the main emitting region to a stellar height of 3.7-6.8 Rstar. The recorded activity is consistent with the proposed picture for synchrotron emission initiated by a magnetic reconnection event when the two stellar magnetospheres of the highly eccentric (e=0.556) binary are believed to collide near periastron as the stars approach a minimum separation of 8 Rstar (~13 Rsolar). The similar light curve decay profiles allow us to estimate an average flare duration of…
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