The eclipse of the V773 Tau B circumbinary disk
M.A. Kenworthy, D. Gonz\'alez Picos, E. Elizondo, R.G. Martin, D.M., van Dam, J.E. Rodriguez, G.M. Kennedy, C. Ginski, M. Mugrauer, N. Vogt, C., Adam, R.J. Oelkers

TL;DR
This study analyzes a rare, extended eclipse in the V773 Tau system to characterize its circumbinary disk, refine stellar orbits, and predict future eclipses using combined photometry, high-resolution imaging, and modeling.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed characterization of the V773 Tau B circumbinary disk's orientation, structure, and its relation to stellar orbits, predicting the next eclipse around 2037.
Findings
Disk extends to ~5 au around B binary
Disk inclination is approximately 73 degrees
Next eclipse predicted for around 2037
Abstract
A deep (~70%) and extended (~150 days) eclipse was seen towards the young multiple stellar system V773 Tau in 2010. We interpret it as due to the passage of a circumbinary disk around the B components moving in front of the A components. Our aim is to characterise the orientation and structure of the disk, to refine the orbits of the subcomponents, and to predict when the next eclipse will occur. We combine the photometry from several ground based surveys, construct a model for the light curve of the eclipse, and use high angular resolution imaging to refine the orbits of the three components of the system, A, B and C. Frequency analysis of the light curves, including from the TESS satellite, enables characterisation of the rotational periods of the Aa and Ab stars. A toy model of the circumbinary disk shows that it extends out to approximately 5 au around the B binary and has an…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
