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arxiv: 1701.06568 · v1 · submitted 2017-01-23 · 🌌 astro-ph.SR · astro-ph.EP

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The transiting dust clumps in the evolved disk of the Sun-like UXor RZ Psc

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classification 🌌 astro-ph.SR astro-ph.EP
keywords diskclumpsevidencesun-likeaboveasteroidasteroidalbelt
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RZ Psc is a young Sun-like star, long associated with the UXor class of variable stars, which is partially or wholly dimmed by dust clumps several times each year. The system has a bright and variable infrared excess, which has been interpreted as evidence that the dimming events are the passage of asteroidal fragments in front of the host star. Here, we present a decade of optical photometry of RZ Psc and take a critical look at the asteroid belt interpretation. We show that the distribution of light curve gradients is non-uniform for deep events, which we interpret as possible evidence for an asteroidal fragment-like clump structure. However, the clumps are very likely seen above a high optical depth mid-plane, so the disk's bulk clumpiness is not revealed. While circumstantial evidence suggests an asteroid belt is more plausible than a gas-rich transition disk, the evolutionary status remains uncertain. We suggest that the rarity of Sun-like stars showing disk-related variability may arise because i) any accretion streams are transparent, and/or ii) turbulence above the inner rim is normally shadowed by a flared outer disk.

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