Exocomet Orbit Fitting: Accelerating Coma Absorption During Transits of $\beta$ Pictoris
Grant M. Kennedy

TL;DR
This paper develops a method to directly derive exocomet orbits from observed acceleration in spectral absorption features during transits of $eta$ Pictoris, validating previous models and improving understanding of exocomet dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a novel orbit fitting technique that uses spectral acceleration data to directly determine exocomet orbital parameters, enhancing prior indirect estimation methods.
Findings
Observed spectral acceleration matches model predictions.
Orbit fitting results agree with previous evaporation model estimates.
Deeper absorption correlates with more distant transits as predicted.
Abstract
Comets are a remarkable feature in our night sky, visible on their passage through the inner Solar system as the Sun's energy sublimates ices and liberates surface material, generating beautiful comae, dust, and ion tails. Comets are also thought to orbit other stars, and are the most promising interpretation of sporadic absorption features (i.e. transits) seen in spectra of stars such as Pictoris and 49 Ceti. These `exocomets' are thought to form and evolve in the same way as in the Solar system, and as in the Solar system we may gain insight into their origins by deriving their orbits. In the case of Pictoris, orbits have been estimated indirectly, using the radial velocity of the absorption features coupled with a physical evaporation model to estimate the stellocentric distance at transit . Here, we note that the inferred imply that some…
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