AK Scorpii
AK Scorpii is a Herbig Ae/Be star and spectroscopic binary star about 459 light-years distant in the constellation Scorpius. The star belongs to the nearby Upper Centaurus–Lupus star-forming region and the star is actively accreting material. The binary is surrounded by a circumbinary disk that was imaged with VLT/SPHERE in scattered light and with ALMA.
AK Scorpii is about 18 million years old, which is young on astronomical timescales. The binary consists out of two stars with an equal mass of 1.25 M☉ respectively and the two stars orbit each other within 13.6 days. The binary is surrounded by a narrow ring of dust with a radius of about 30 astronomical units and the gap between the binary and the dust disk is filled by some gas. The binary is in an eccentric orbit that causes variable accretion rates due to gravitational interactions with the disk. During the furthest point in the orbit of the binary (apastron), matter is dragged from the inner disk border into the gap. The material forms accretion streams that fill ring-like structures around each component of the binary. At the closest point in the orbit (periastron), the ring-like structures come into contact, leading to an angular momentum loss and thus producing an accretion outburst.


