Accretion and extinction variations in the low-mass pre-main sequence binary system WX Cha
Eleonora Fiorellino, Gabriella Zsidi, Agnes Kospal, Peter Abraham,, Attila Bodi, Gaitee Hussain, Carlo F. Manara, and Andras Pal

TL;DR
This study investigates the accretion variability of the binary system WX Cha through multi-epoch spectroscopy and photometry, revealing higher-than-average accretion rates likely influenced by its disk mass and binary nature.
Contribution
It provides detailed measurements of accretion rates and variability in WX Cha, highlighting the impact of binary configuration and disk mass on accretion processes.
Findings
WX Cha exhibits higher accretion rates than typical T Tauri stars.
Photometric variability is driven by changes in accretion luminosity and extinction.
The binary nature and disk mass influence the accretion behavior.
Abstract
Light curves of young star systems show photometric variability due to different kinematic, and physical processes. One of the main contributors to the photometric variability is the changing mass accretion rate, which regulates the interplay between the forming young star and the protoplanetary disk. We collected high-resolution spectroscopy in eight different epochs, as well as ground-based and space-borne multi-epoch optical and infrared photometry of WX Cha, an M0 binary system, with an almost edge-on disk (i = 87degrees) in the Chamaeleon I star-forming region. Spectroscopic observations cover 72 days, the ground-based optical monitoring covers 42 days while space-borne TESS photometry extends for 56 days. The multi-wavelength light curves exhibit quasi-periodic variability of 0.35 - 0.53 mag in the near-infrared, and of 1.3 mag in g band. We studied the variability of selected…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Space Exploration and Technology
