Drifting Asteroid Fragments Around WD 1145+017
S. Rappaport, B.L. Gary, T. Kaye, A. Vanderburg, B. Croll, P. Benni,, J. Foote

TL;DR
This study presents extensive photometric observations of WD 1145+017, revealing drifting asteroid fragments with systematic phase shifts, allowing estimation of the asteroid's mass and insights into its disintegration process.
Contribution
First detailed analysis of drifting asteroid fragments around WD 1145+017 using extensive ground-based photometry, estimating asteroid mass from drift rates.
Findings
Detected 237 flux dips indicating complex debris activity.
Identified a dominant 4.5004-hour period with drifting features.
Estimated asteroid mass to be about 10^23 grams, roughly 1/10th of Ceres.
Abstract
We have obtained extensive photometric observations of the polluted white dwarf WD 1145+017 which has been reported to be transited by at least one, and perhaps several, large asteroids (or, planetesimals) with dust emission. We have carried out 53 observation sessions on 37 nights, totaling 192 hours, of this 17th magnitude star with small to modest size telescopes covering the interval 2015 November 1 to 2016 January 21. In all, we have detected some 237 significant dips in flux. Periodograms of the data reveal a significant periodicity of 4.5004 hours that is consistent with the dominant ("A") period detected with K2. The folded light curve at this period shows there is an hour-long depression in flux with a mean depth of nearly 10%. This depression is comprised of a series of shorter and sometimes deeper dips that do not always occur at exactly the same orbital phase, and which…
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