http://arxiv.org/abs/2102.08911
We find that dust clouds which eclipse young stars obscure the stellar disc inhomogeneously. In the particular case of CQ Tau, we find isolated optically thick structures with sizes $\lesssim0.6R_*$ and derive the typical $A_{V}$ gradient in the plane of the sky, finding it as high as a few magnitudes per stellar radius. The large extinction gradients and complex structure of the obscuring clouds lead not only to a noticeable Rossiter–McLaughlin effect, but also to complex and variable shaping of stellar absorption lines.
A. Dodin and E. Suslina
Thu, 18 Feb 21
53/66
Comments: 11 pages, 11 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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