Occultations from an active accretion disk in a 72 day detached post-Algol system detected by K2
G. Zhou, S. Rappaport, L. Nelson, C.X. Huang, A. Senhadji, J.E., Rodriguez, A. Vanderburg, S. Quinn, C.I. Johnson, D.W. Latham, G. Torres,, B.L. Gary, T.G. Tan, M.C. Johnson, J. Burt, M.H. Kristiansen, T.L. Jacobs, D., LaCourse, H. M. Schwengeler, I. Terentev, A. Bieryla

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and analysis of a post-Algol binary system with a large accretion disk causing periodic occultations, combining photometric and spectroscopic data to understand its evolution and current state.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed characterization of MWC 882 as a post-Algol system with a large, transient accretion disk, revealing its evolutionary history and current short-lived disk state.
Findings
Detected 19-day long, 7% deep eclipses caused by the disk
Measured the dynamical masses of the binary components
Observed active accretion signatures and disk gas absorption features
Abstract
Disks in binary systems can cause exotic eclipsing events. MWC 882 (BD-22 4376, EPIC 225300403) is such a disk-eclipsing system identified from observations during Campaign 11 of the K2 mission. We propose that MWC 882 is a post-Algol system with a B7 donor star of mass in a 72 day period orbit around an A0 accreting star of mass . The disk around the accreting star occults the donor star once every orbit, inducing 19 day long, 7% deep eclipses identified by K2, and subsequently found in pre-discovery ASAS and ASAS-SN observations. We coordinated a campaign of photometric and spectroscopic observations for MWC 882 to measure the dynamical masses of the components and to monitor the system during eclipse. We found the photometric eclipse to be gray to %. We found the primary star exhibits spectroscopic…
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