KIC 8462852 stood out among more than 100,000 stars in the Kepler catalogue
because of the strange features of its light curve: a wide, asymmetric dimming
taking up to 15 per cent of the light at D793 and a period of multiple, narrow
dimmings happening approximately 700 days later. Several models have been
proposed to account for this abnormal behaviour, most of which require either
unlikely causes or a finely-tuned timing. We aim at offering a relatively
natural solution, invoking only phenomena that have been previously observed,
although perhaps in larger or more massive versions. We model the system using
a large, ringed body whose transit produces the first dimming and a swarm of
Trojan objects sharing its orbit that causes the second period of multiple
dimmings. The resulting orbital period is T≈12 years, with a semi-major
axis a≈6 au. Our model allows us to make two straightforward
predictions: we expect the passage of a new swarm of Trojans in front of the
star starting during the early months of 2021, and a new transit of the main
object during the first half of 2023.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. v3: Accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter