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Once in a blue moon: detection of 'bluing' during debris transits in the white dwarf WD1145+017

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arxiv 1702.05483 v2 pith:PPNG3HKJ submitted 2017-02-17 astro-ph.EP

Once in a blue moon: detection of 'bluing' during debris transits in the white dwarf WD1145+017

classification astro-ph.EP
keywords transitsduringtransitingbluingcolourdatadustdwarf
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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The first transiting planetesimal orbiting a white dwarf was recently detected in K2 data of WD1145+017 and has been followed up intensively. The multiple, long, and variable transits suggest the transiting objects are dust clouds, probably produced by a disintegrating asteroid. In addition, the system contains circumstellar gas, evident by broad absorption lines, mostly in the u'-band, and a dust disc, indicated by an infrared excess. Here we present the first detection of a change in colour of WD1145+017 during transits, using simultaneous multi-band fast-photometry ULTRACAM measurements over the u'g'r'i'-bands. The observations reveal what appears to be 'bluing' during transits; transits are deeper in the redder bands, with a u'-r' colour difference of up to ~-0.05 mag. We explore various possible explanations for the bluing. 'Spectral' photometry obtained by integrating over bandpasses in the spectroscopic data in- and out-of-transit, compared to the photometric data, shows that the observed colour difference is most likely the result of reduced circumstellar absorption in the spectrum during transits. This indicates that the transiting objects and the gas share the same line-of-sight, and that the gas covers the white dwarf only partially, as would be expected if the gas, the transiting debris, and the dust emitting the infrared excess, are part of the same general disc structure (although possibly at different radii). In addition, we present the results of a week-long monitoring campaign of the system.

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