http://arxiv.org/abs/2204.02832
Long secondary periods (LSPs), observed in a third of pulsating red giant and supergiant stars, are the only unexplained type of large-amplitude stellar variability known at this time. Numerous authors have explored various scenarios for the origin of LSPs, but were unable to give a final solution to this problem. We present known properties of LSP variables and show new results proving that the physical mechanism responsible for LSPs is binarity. Namely, the LSP light changes are due to the presence of a dusty cloud orbiting the red giant together with a brown-dwarf companion and obscuring the star once per orbit. In this scenario, the low-mass companion is a former planet that accreted a significant amount of mass from the envelope of its host star and grew into a brown dwarf.
I. Soszyński
Thu, 7 Apr 22
38/45
Comments: 9 pages, 4 figures, to appear in the Proceedings of the 40th Meeting of the Polish Astronomical Society
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