An Asymmetric Eclipse Seen Towards the Pre-Main Sequence Binary System V928 Tau
Dirk van Dam, Matthew Kenworthy, Trevor David, Eric Mamajek, Lynne, Hillenbrand, Anne Marie Cody, Andrew Howard, Howard Isaacson, David Ciardi,, Luisa Rebull, John Stauffer, Rahul Patel, Andrew Collier Cameron, Joseph, Rodriguez, Grzegorz Pojma\'nski, Erica Gonzales

TL;DR
This study reports the detection of an asymmetric eclipse in the V928 Tau binary system, suggesting a substellar companion with a possible disk or ring system, and provides new orbital and spectroscopic insights.
Contribution
It introduces the first evidence of a substellar companion causing an asymmetric eclipse in a pre-main sequence binary, with detailed modeling of its disk and orbital parameters.
Findings
Detection of a 60% brightness dip lasting about 9 hours.
Modeling indicates the eclipsing object has a disk with a radius of ~1 R_*.
Additional dimming events suggest possible periodicity but no definitive period found.
Abstract
K2 observations of the weak-lined T Tauri binary V928 Tau A+B show the detection of a single, asymmetric eclipse which may be due to a previously unknown substellar companion eclipsing one component of the binary with an orbital period 66 days. Over an interval of about 9 hours, one component of the binary dims by around 60%, returning to its normal brightness about 5 hours later. From modeling of the eclipse shape we find evidence that the eclipsing companion may be surrounded by a disk or a vast ring system. The modeled disk has a radius of , with an inclination of , a tilt of , an impact parameter of and an opacity of 1.00. The occulting disk must also move at a transverse velocity of , which depending on whether it orbits V928 Tau A or…
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