Mysterious Dust-emitting Object Orbiting TIC 400799224

Author:

Powell Brian P.ORCID,Kostov Veselin B.ORCID,Rappaport Saul A.ORCID,Tokovinin AndreiORCID,Shporer AviORCID,Collins Karen A.ORCID,Corbett HankORCID,Borkovits TamásORCID,Gary Bruce L.ORCID,Chiang EugeneORCID,Rodriguez Joseph E.ORCID,Law Nicholas M.ORCID,Barclay ThomasORCID,Gagliano RobertORCID,Vanderburg AndrewORCID,Olmschenk GregORCID,Kruse EthanORCID,Schlieder Joshua E.ORCID,Soto Alan VasquezORCID,Goeke ErinORCID,Jacobs Thomas L.ORCID,Kristiansen Martti H.ORCID,LaCourse Daryll M.ORCID,Omohundro Mark,Schwengeler Hans M.ORCID,Terentev Ivan A.ORCID,Schmitt Allan R.ORCID

Abstract

Abstract We report the discovery of a unique object of uncertain nature—but quite possibly a disintegrating asteroid or minor planet—orbiting one star of the widely separated binary TIC 400799224. We initially identified the system in data from TESS Sector 10 via an abnormally shaped fading event in the light curve (hereafter “dips”). Follow-up speckle imaging determined that TIC 400799224 is actually two stars of similar brightness at 0.″62 separation, forming a likely bound binary with projected separation of ∼300 au. We cannot yet determine which star in the binary is host to the dips in flux. ASAS-SN and Evryscope archival data show that there is a strong periodicity of the dips at ∼19.77 days, leading us to believe that an occulting object is orbiting the host star, though the duration, depth, and shape of the dips vary substantially. Statistical analysis of the ASAS-SN data shows that the dips only occur sporadically at a detectable threshold in approximately one out of every three to five transits, lending credence to the possibility that the occulter is a sporadically emitted dust cloud. The cloud is also fairly optically thick, blocking up to 37% or 75% of the light from the host star, depending on the true host. Further observations may allow for greater detail to be gleaned as to the origin and composition of the occulter, as well as to a determination of which of the two stars comprising TIC 400799224 is the true host star of the dips.

Publisher

American Astronomical Society

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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1. RZ Piscium Hosts a Compact and Highly Perturbed Debris Disk;The Astrophysical Journal;2023-12-01

2. The Evryscope Fast Transient Engine: Real-time Detection for Rapidly Evolving Transients;The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series;2023-04-01

3. TIC 114936199: A Quadruple Star System with a 12 Day Outer-orbit Eclipse;The Astrophysical Journal;2022-10-01

4. Speckle Interferometry at SOAR in 2021;The Astronomical Journal;2022-07-19

5. The Visual Survey Group: A Decade of Hunting Exoplanets and Unusual Stellar Events with Space-based Telescopes;Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific;2022-07-01

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