664 research outputs found
Secondary stars in CVs - the observational picture
Recent theoretical and observational progress has substantially improved the
definition of the lower main sequence and established a new basis for a
comparison of main sequence stars and the secondaries in CVs. The evolutionary
sequences of Kolb & Baraffe [1999] imply that the secondaries in many CVs are
expanded compared with main sequence stars of the same mass as a consequence of
unusually high mass transfer rates and/or pre-CV nuclear evolution. We show
that the location of the secondaries of all well-studied CVs in the spectral
type period diagram implies that they are consistent with having near-solar
metallicities. We show, furthermore, that the surface brightness of K/M stars
depends on gravity and metallicity and present new Barnes-Evans relations valid
for dwarfs of near-solar metallicity and the secondaries in CVs of the galactic
disk population. Distances derived by the surface brightness method agree with
recent measurements of the trigonometric parallaxes of a few selected systems.Comment: 7 pages, 4 Figures, accepted for publication in New Astronomy Review
The secondary star and distance of the polar V1309 Ori
The first phase-resolved JHK light curves of the eclipsing polar (AM Herculis
binary) V1309 Ori are presented and interpreted. We separate the contributions
from the secondary star and from other sources with the aim of determining a
photometric distance. Simple model calculations show that the accretion stream
and the cyclotron source on the accreting white dwarf are minor contributors to
the infrared light, allowing an accurate determination of spectral type and
absolute flux of the secondary star. The unilluminated backside of the
secondary star as seen in eclipse has spectral type dM0 to dM0+. Its dereddened
magnitude is K = 13.58 at orbital phase phi = 0 (eclipse). Using the calibrated
surface brightness of M-stars and the published mass of the secondary, M2 =
0.46 Msun, we obtain a distance d = 600 +/- 25 pc which scales as M2^(1/2). The
radius of the Roche-lobe filling secondary exceeds the main-sequence radius of
an M0 star by 21 +11/-6 %. The debated origin of the infrared light of V1309
Ori has been settled in favor of the secondary star as the main contributor and
an accurate distance has been derived that will place estimates of the
luminosity and synchronization time scale on a more secure basis.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
The New Eclipsing Cataclysmic Variable SDSS 154453+2553
The cataclysmic variable SDSS154453+2553 was recently identified in the Sloan
Digital Sky Survey. We obtained spectra and photometry at the MDM Observatory,
which revealed an eclipse with a 6.03 hour period. The H{\alpha} emission line
exhibits a strong rotational disturbance during eclipse, indicating that it
arises in an accretion disk. A contribution from an M-type companion is also
observed. Time-series photometry during eclipse gives an ephemeris of
2454878.0062(15) + 0.251282(2)E. We present spectroscopy through the orbit and
eclipse photometry. Our analysis of the secondary star indicates a distance of
800 {\pm} 180 pc.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, Accepted for publication in PAS
A new soft X-ray spectral model for polars with an application to AM Herculis
We present a simple heuristic model for the time-averaged soft X-ray
temperature distribution in the accretion spot on the white dwarf in polars.
The model is based on the analysis of the Chandra LETG spectrum of the
prototype polar AM Her and involves an exponential distribution of the emitting
area vs. blackbody temperature a(T) = a0 exp(-T/T0). With one free parameter
besides the normalization, it is mathematically as simple as the single
blackbody, but is physically more plausible and fits the soft X-ray and
far-ultraviolet spectral fluxes much better. The model yields more reliable
values of the wavelength-integrated flux of the soft X-ray component and the
implied accretion rate than reported previously.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Zeeman tomography of magnetic white dwarfs. IV, The complex field structure of the polars EF Eridani, BL Hydri and CP Tucanae
Context. The magnetic fields of the accreting white dwarfs in magnetic cataclysmic variables (mCVs) determine the accretion geometries, the emission properties, and the secular evolution of these objects.
Aims. We determine the structure of the surface magnetic fields of the white dwarf primaries in magnetic CVs using Zeeman tomography.
Methods. Our study is based on orbital-phase resolved optical flux and circular polarization spectra of the polars EF Eri, BL Hyi, and CP Tuc obtained with FORS1 at the ESO VLT. An evolutionary algorithm is used to synthesize best fits to these spectra from an
extensive database of pre-computed Zeeman spectra. The general approach has been described in previous papers of this series.
Results. The results achieved with simple geometries as centered or offset dipoles are not satisfactory. Significantly improved fits are obtained for multipole expansions that are truncated at degree lmax = 3 or 5 and include all tesseral and sectoral components with
0 ≤ m ≤ l. The most frequent field strengths of 13, 18, and 10MG for EF Eri, BL Hyi, and CP Tuc, and the ranges of field strength covered are similar for the dipole and multipole models, but only the latter provide access to accreting matter at the right locations on the white dwarf. The results suggest that the field geometries of the white dwarfs in short-period mCVs are quite complex, with
strong contributions from multipoles higher than the dipole in spite of a typical age of the white dwarfs in CVs in excess of 1 Gyr.
Conclusions. It is feasible to derive the surface field structure of an accreting white dwarf from phase-resolved low-state circular spectropolarimetry of sufficiently high signal-to-noise ratio. The fact that independent information is available on the strength and
direction of the field in the accretion spot from high-state observations helps in unraveling the global field structure
Spectroscopy of Four Cataclysmic Variables with Periods above 7 Hours
We present spectroscopy of four cataclysmic variables. Using radial velocity
measurements, we find orbital periods for the first time. The stars and their
periods are GY Hya, 0.347230(9) d; SDSS J204448-045929, 1.68(1) d; V392 Hya,
0.324952(5) d; and RX J1951.7+3716, 0.492(1) d. We also detect the spectra of
the secondary stars, estimate their spectral types, and derive distances based
on surface brightness and Roche lobe constraints.Comment: 22 pages, 3 figures, 5 tables, to be published in December 2006 PAS
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