Young "Dipper" Stars in Upper Sco and $\rho$ Oph Observed by K2
M. Ansdell, E. Gaidos, S. A. Rappaport, T. L. Jacobs, D. M. LaCourse,, K. J. Jek, A. W. Mann, M. C. Wyatt, G. Kennedy, J. P. Williams, T. S., Boyajian

TL;DR
This study investigates young dipper stars in star-forming regions, analyzing their disks and variability to understand the causes of their dimming events, revealing correlations with inner disk structures and exploring possible mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides multi-faceted observations of young dipper stars, linking their dimming behavior to inner disk features and proposing three potential physical mechanisms.
Findings
Dippers show 10-20 flux dips over 80 days with up to 40% depth.
Inner disk structures are likely responsible for the dimming events.
Disk masses are lower than typical protoplanetary disks, suggesting advanced evolution.
Abstract
We present ten young (10 Myr) late-K and M dwarf stars observed in K2 Campaign 2 that host protoplanetary disks and exhibit quasi-periodic or aperiodic dimming events. Their optical light curves show 10-20 dips in flux over the 80-day observing campaign with durations of 0.5-2 days and depths of up to 40%. These stars are all members of the Ophiuchus (1 Myr) or Upper Scorpius (10 Myr) star-forming regions. To investigate the nature of these "dippers" we obtained: optical and near-infrared spectra to determine stellar properties and identify accretion signatures; adaptive optics imaging to search for close companions that could cause optical variations and/or influence disk evolution; and millimeter-wavelength observations to constrain disk dust and gas masses. The spectra reveal Li I absorption and H emission consistent with stellar…
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