Recurrent dust formation by WR 48a on a 30-year timescale
Peredur M. Williams (1), Karel A. van der Hucht (2,3), Francois van, Wyk (4), Fred Marang (4), Patricia A. Whitelock (4,5), Patrice Bouchet (6), and Diah Y. A. Setia Gunawan (7) ((1) Institute for Astronomy, University of, Edinburgh, Royal Observatory, Edinburgh

TL;DR
This study tracks 30 years of infrared observations of WR 48a, revealing recurrent dust formation episodes every 32+ years, supporting its classification as a long-period colliding-wind binary with episodic dust production.
Contribution
It provides the first long-term infrared monitoring of WR 48a, demonstrating recurrent dust formation and proposing its binary nature with an elliptical orbit, challenging existing models of dust production in such systems.
Findings
Dust formation recurs every ~32 years.
Evidence of an Oe or Be companion star.
Orbit likely has eccentricity ~0.6.
Abstract
We present infrared photometry of the WC8 Wolf-Rayet system WR 48a observed with telescopes at ESO, the SAAO and the AAT between 1982 and 2011 which show a slow decline in dust emission from the previously reported outburst in 1978--79 until about 1997, when significant dust emission was still evident. This was followed by a slow rise, accelerating to reach and overtake the first (1978) photometry, demonstrating that the outburst observed in 1978--79 was not an isolated event, but that they recur at intervals of 32+ years. This suggests that WR 48a is a long-period dust maker and colliding-wind binary (CWB). The locus of WR 48a in the (H-L), K colour-magnitude diagram implies that the rate of dust formation fell between 1979 and about 1997 and then increased steadily until 2011. Superimposed on the long-term variation are secondary (`mini') eruptions in (at least) 1990, 1994, 1997, 1999…
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