Eric E. Mamajek, Alice C. Quillen, Mark J. Pecaut, Fred Moolekamp, Erin L. Scott, Matthew A. Kenworthy, Andrew Collier Cameron, Neil R. Parley
The large relative sizes of circumstellar and circumplanetary
disks imply that they might be seen in eclipse in stellar light curves. We
estimate that a survey of ~10^4 young (~10 Myr old) post-accretion pre-MS stars
monitored for ~10 years should yield at least a few deep eclipses from
circumplanetary disks and disks surrounding low mass companion stars. We
present photometric and spectroscopic data for a pre-MS K5 star (1SWASP
J140747.93-394542.6), a newly discovered ~0.9 Msun member of the ~16 Myr-old
Upper Cen-Lup subgroup of Sco-Cen at a kinematic distance of 128 pc. SuperWASP
and ASAS light curves for this star show a remarkably long, deep, and complex
eclipse event centered on 29 April 2007. At least 5 multi-day dimming events of
>0.5 mag are identified, with a >3.3 mag deep eclipse bracketed by two pairs of
~1 mag eclipses symmetrically occurring +-12 days and +-26 days before and
after. Hence, significant dimming of the star was taking place on and off over
at least a ~54 day period in 2007, and a strong >1 mag dimming event occurred
over a ~12 day span. We place a firm lower limit on the period of 850 days
(i.e. the orbital radius of the eclipser must be >1.7 AU and orbital velocity
must be <22 km/s). The shape of the light curve is similar to the lop-sided
eclipses of the Be star EE Cep. We suspect that this new star is being eclipsed
by a low-mass object orbited by a dense inner disk, girded by at least 3 dusty
rings of lower optical depth. Between these rings are at least two annuli of
near-zero optical depth (i.e. gaps), possibly cleared out by planets or moons,
depending on the nature of the secondary. For possible periods in the range
2.33-200 yr, the estimated total ring mass is ~8-0.4 Mmoon (if the rings have
optical opacity similar to Saturn's rings), and the edge of the outermost
detected ring has orbital radius ~0.4-0.09 AU.
View original:
http://arxiv.org/abs/1108.4070
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