Discovery of Gaia17bpp, a Giant Star with the Deepest and Longest Known Dimming Event
Anastasios Tzanidakis, James R. A. Davenport, Eric C. Bellm, Yuankun, Wang

TL;DR
Gaia17bpp is a giant star exhibiting the deepest and longest known dimming event, likely caused by a large, opaque disk transiting the star, revealing insights into rare binary systems with debris disks.
Contribution
This study reports the discovery and detailed analysis of Gaia17bpp's unique dimming event, proposing a novel disk transit model for such phenomena.
Findings
Deep 4.5 mag dimming lasting over 6.5 years
Identification of a large, optically thick disk as the cause
Possible relation to rare binary systems like Epsilon Aurigae
Abstract
We report the serendipitous discovery of Gaia17bpp/2MASS J19372316+1759029, a star with a deep single large-amplitude dimming event of 4.5 magnitudes that lasted over 6.5 years. Using the optical to IR spectral energy distribution (SED), we constrain the primary star to be a cool giant M0-III star with effective temperature =3,850 K and radius R=58 R. Based on the SED fitting, we obtained a bimodal posterior distribution of primary stellar masses at 1.5 M and 3.7 M. Within the last 66 years of photometric coverage, no other significant dimming events of this depth and duration were identified in the optical light curves. Using a Gaussian Process, we fit a high-order Gaussian model to the optical and IR light curves and conclude the dimming event exhibits moderate asymmetries from optical to IR. At the minimum of the dimming event, the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
