Bibcode
Bouvier, J.; Chelli, A.; Allain, S.; Carrasco, L.; Costero, R.; Cruz-Gonzalez, I.; Dougados, C.; Fernández, M.; Martín, E. L.; Ménard, F.; Mennessier, C.; Mujica, R.; Recillas, E.; Salas, L.; Schmidt, G.; Wichmann, R.
Referencia bibliográfica
Astronomy and Astrophysics, v.349, p.619-635 (1999)
Fecha de publicación:
9
1999
Revista
Número de citas
247
Número de citas referidas
221
Descripción
We have monitored the photometric, spectroscopic and polarimetric
variations of the classical T Tauri star (CTTS) AA
Tau over a period of a month. The light curve consists of more
than 260 measurements in each of the B and V-bands over a continuous
time period of 30 days and more than 180 measurements in the R and
I-bands. This provides unprecedented detail of the photometric
variations of a CTTS on timescales ranging from hours to weeks. We find
that AA Tau's light curve is quite unlike that of most other CTTS. It
exhibits a roughly constant brightness level, interrupted by
quasi-cyclic fading episodes with an amplitude of 1.4 mag in BVRI
filters. We interpret this behaviour as resulting from quasi-periodic
occultations of the stellar photosphere by opaque circumstellar
material. The interpretation derives from the lack of significant color
variations associated with the fading of the system and is strengthened
by the higher polarization level measured when the system is faint. We
argue that the occultations are produced by a warp in AA Tau's inner
disk which presumably results from the dynamical interaction between the
disk and the stellar magnetosphere. We present a model that accounts for
the observations quite naturally if we assume that the stellar
magnetosphere is a large-scale dipole tilted onto the stellar rotational
axis which disrupts the disk at the corotation radius. We derive the
geometrical properties of AA Tau's accretion zone in the framework of
this model and constrain the location of veiling and Balmer line
emitting regions. Although AA Tau's light curve is atypical, the
constraints derived here on the structure of its accretion zone may
apply as well to other CTTS. It is probably only because AA Tau is seen
at a peculiar inclination, close to edge-on, that occultations are
conspicuous and its photometric behaviour so clearly reveals this
phenomenon. Based on observations obtained at Haute-Provence and Pic du
Midi Observatories (France), San Pedro Mártir and Cananea
Observatories (México), ESO La Silla Observatory (Chile), Steward
Observatory (USA) and Teide Observatory (Spain)}