Evidence for Variable, Correlated X-ray and Optical/IR Extinction toward the Nearby, Pre-main Sequence Binary TWA 30
David A. Principe (Universidad Diego Portales, Chile), G. G. Sacco, (INAF Arcetri, Italy), Joel H. Kastner (Rochester Institute of Technology,, USA), Beate Stelzer (INAF Palermo, Italy), Juan Alcala (INAF Napoli, Italy)

TL;DR
This study presents simultaneous X-ray and optical/IR observations of the binary TWA 30, revealing variable extinction and correlated changes in gas and dust absorption, with implications for disk composition and structure.
Contribution
It provides the first contemporaneous X-ray and optical/IR data showing variable extinction and gas-to-dust ratios in a pre-main sequence binary with edge-on disks.
Findings
Significant decrease in X-ray luminosity compared to past observations.
Large variability in visual extinction ($A_V$) over 20 hours.
Lower than ISM typical $N_H$/$A_V$ ratio indicating gas depletion or metal deficiency.
Abstract
We present contemporaneous XMM-Newton X-ray and ground-based optical/near-IR spectroscopic observations of the nearby ( pc), low-mass (mid-M) binary system TWA 30A and 30B. The components of this wide (separation 3400 AU) binary are notable for their nearly edge-on disk viewing geometries, high levels of variability, and evidence for collimated stellar outflows. We obtained XMM-Newton X-ray observations of TWA 30A and 30B in 2011 June and July, accompanied (respectively) by IRTF SpeX (near-IR) and VLT XSHOOTER (visible/near-IR) spectroscopy obtained within 20 hours of the X-ray observations. TWA 30A was detected in both XMM-Newton observations at relatively faint intrinsic X-ray luminosities ( ) compared to stars of similar mass and age . The intrinsic (0.15-2.0 keV) X-ray luminosities measured in 2011 had decreased by…
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