The Role of Disk Tearing and Precession in the Observed Variability of Pleione
Keegan C. Marr, Carol E. Jones, Chris Tycner, Alex C. Carciofi, Ariane, C. Fonseca Silva

TL;DR
This study models Pleione's disk variability over decades, revealing that disk precession and tearing caused by a companion star explain observed spectral changes and phases.
Contribution
It introduces a combined precessing and tearing disk model to explain Pleione's long-term variability, incorporating recent SPH simulation insights.
Findings
Precessing disk model matches some observed variability.
Disk tearing due to a companion star explains all observed trends.
Precessional period estimated at approximately 80.5 years.
Abstract
We acquired H spectroscopic observations from 2005 to 2019 showing Pleione has transitioned from a Be phase to a Be-shell phase during this period. Using the radiative transfer code \hdust\ we created a grid of disk models for Pleione. We successfully reproduced the observed transition with a disk model that varies in inclination while maintaining an equatorial density of , and an H emitting region extending to . We use a precessing disk model to extrapolate the changing disk inclination over years and follow the variability in archival observations. The best-fit disk model precesses over a line of sight inclination between and with a precessional period of years. Our precessing models match some of the observed…
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