2,806 research outputs found
The Secondary Star in Cataclysmic Variables and Low Mass X-ray Binaries
We critically re-examine the available data on the spectral types, masses and
radii of the secondary stars in cataclysmic variables (CVs) and low-mass X-ray
binaries (LMXBs), using the new catalogue of Ritter & Kolb (1998) as a starting
point. We find there are 55 reliable spectral type determinations and only 14
reliable mass determinations of CV secondary stars (10 and 5, respectively, in
the case of LMXBs). We derive new spectral type-period, mass-radius,
mass-period and radius-period relations, and compare them with theoretical
predictions. We find that CV secondary stars with orbital periods shorter than
7-8 hours are, as a group, indistinguishable from main sequence stars in
detached binaries. We find it is not valid, however, to estimate the mass from
the spectral type of the secondary star in CVs or LMXBs. We find that LMXB
secondary stars show some evidence for evolution, with secondary stars which
are slightly too large for their mass. We show how the masses and radii of the
secondary stars in CVs can be used to test the validity of the disrupted
magnetic braking model of CV evolution, but we find that the currently
available data are not sufficiently accurate or numerous to allow such an
analysis. As well as considering secondary star masses, we also discuss the
masses of the white dwarfs in CVs, and find mean values of M_1 = 0.69+/-0.13
M_sun below the period gap, and M_1 = 0.80+/-0.22 M_sun above the period gap.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figure
A Self-Occulting Accretion Disk in the SW Sex Star DW UMa
We present the ultraviolet spectrum of the SW Sex star and nova-like variable
DW UMa in an optical low state, as observed with the Space Telescope Imaging
Spectrograph on board the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). The data are well
described by a synthetic white dwarf (WD) spectrum with T_eff = 46,000 +/- 1000
K, log g = 7.60 +/- 0.15, v*sin(i) = 370 +/- 100 km/s and Z/Z_solar = 0.47 +/-
0.15. For this combination of T_eff and log g, WD models predict M_WD = 0.48
+/- 0.06 M_solar and R_WD = (1.27 +/- 0.18) * 10^9 cm. Combining the radius
estimate with the normalization of the spectral fit, we obtain a distance
estimate of d = 830 +/-150 pc.
During our observations, DW UMa was approximately 3 magnitudes fainter in V
than in the high state. A comparison of our low-state HST spectrum to a
high-state spectrum obtained with the International Ultraviolet Explorer shows
that the former is much bluer and has a higher continuum level shortward of
1450 A. Since DW UMa is an eclipsing system, this suggests that an optically
thick accretion disk rim blocks our view of the WD primary in the high state.
If self-occulting accretion disks are common among the SW Sex stars, we can
account for (i) the preference for high-inclination systems within the class
and (ii) their V-shaped continuum eclipses. Moreover, even though the emission
lines produced by a self-obscured disk are generally still double-peaked, they
are weaker and narrower than those produced by an unobscured disk. This may
allow a secondary line emission mechanism to dominate and produce the
single-peaked, optical lines that are a distinguishing characteristic of the SW
Sex stars.Comment: 9 pages, including 2 figures; accepted for publication in
Astrophysical Journal Letters; New version matches version in press (footnote
added to discussion section; figures now use color
Random Projections For Large-Scale Regression
Fitting linear regression models can be computationally very expensive in
large-scale data analysis tasks if the sample size and the number of variables
are very large. Random projections are extensively used as a dimension
reduction tool in machine learning and statistics. We discuss the applications
of random projections in linear regression problems, developed to decrease
computational costs, and give an overview of the theoretical guarantees of the
generalization error. It can be shown that the combination of random
projections with least squares regression leads to similar recovery as ridge
regression and principal component regression. We also discuss possible
improvements when averaging over multiple random projections, an approach that
lends itself easily to parallel implementation.Comment: 13 pages, 3 Figure
Searching for nova shells around cataclysmic variables
We present the results of a search for nova shells around 101 cataclysmic
variables (CVs), using Halpha images taken with the 4.2-m William Herschel
Telescope (WHT) and the 2.5-m Isaac Newton Telescope Photometric Halpha Survey
of the Northern Galactic Plane (IPHAS). Both telescopes are located on La
Palma. We concentrated our WHT search on nova-like variables, whilst our IPHAS
search covered all CVs in the IPHAS footprint. We found one shell out of the 24
nova-like variables we examined. The newly discovered shell is around V1315 Aql
and has a radius of approx.2.5 arcmin, indicative of a nova eruption
approximately 120 years ago. This result is consistent with the idea that the
high mass-transfer rate exhibited by nova-like variables is due to enhanced
irradiation of the secondary by the hot white dwarf following a recent nova
eruption. The implications of our observations for the lifetime of the
nova-like variable phase are discussed. We also examined 4 asynchronous polars,
but found no new shells around any of them, so we are unable to confirm that a
recent nova eruption is the cause of the asynchronicity in the white dwarf
spin. We find tentative evidence of a faint shell around the dwarf nova V1363
Cyg. In addition, we find evidence for a light echo around the nova V2275 Cyg,
which erupted in 2001, indicative of an earlier nova eruption approx.300 years
ago, making V2275 Cyg a possible recurrent nova.Comment: 14 pages, 50 figures, 3 Table
Infrared spectroscopy of cataclysmic variables: III. Dwarf novae below the period gap and novalike variables
We present K-band spectra of the short-period dwarf novae YZ Cnc, LY Hya, BK
Lyn, T Leo, SW UMa and WZ Sge, the novalike variables DW UMa, V1315 Aql, RW
Tri, VY Scl, UU Aqr and GP Com, and a series of field dwarf stars with spectral
types ranging from K2-M6.
The spectra of the dwarf novae are dominated by emission lines of HI and HeI.
The large velocity and equivalent widths of these lines, in conjunction with
the fact that the lines are double-peaked in the highest inclination systems,
indicate an accretion disc origin. In the case of YZ Cnc and T Leo, for which
we obtained time-resolved data covering a complete orbital cycle, the emission
lines show modulations in their equivalent widths which are most probably
associated with the bright spot (the region where the gas stream collides with
the accretion disc). There are no clear detections of the secondary star in any
of the dwarf novae below the period gap, yielding upper limits of 10-30% for
the contribution of the secondary star to the observed K-band flux. In
conjunction with the K-band magnitudes of the dwarf novae, we use the derived
secondary star contributions to calculate lower limits to the distances to
these systems.
The spectra of the novalike variables are dominated by broad, single-peaked
emission lines of HI and HeI - even the eclipsing systems we observed do not
show the double-peaked profiles predicted by standard accretion disc theory.
With the exception of RW Tri, which exhibits NaI, CaI and 12CO absorption
features consistent with a M0V secondary contributing 65% of the observed
K-band flux, we find no evidence for the secondary star in any of the novalike
variables. The implications of this result are discussed.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, to appear in MNRA
LS Peg: A Low-Inclination SW Sextantis-Type Cataclysmic Binary with High-Velocity Balmer Emission Line Wings
We present time-resolved spectroscopy and photometry of the bright
cataclysmic variable LS Peg (= S193). The Balmer lines exhibit broad,
asymmetric wings Doppler-shifted by about 2000 km/s at the edges, while the HeI
lines show phase-dependent absorption features strikingly similar to SW
Sextantis stars, as well as emission through most of the phase. The CIII/NIII
emission blend does not show any phase dependence. From velocities of Halpha
emission lines, we determine an orbital period of 0.174774 +/- 0.000003 d (=
4.1946 h), which agrees with Szkody's (1995) value of approximately 4.2 hours.
No stable photometric signal was found at the orbital period. A non-coherent
quasi-periodic photometric signal was seen at a period of 20.7 +/- 0.3 min.
The high-velocity Balmer wings most probably arise from a stream re-impact
point close to the white dwarf. We present simulated spectra based on a
kinematic model similar to the modified disk-overflow scenario of Hellier &
Robinson (1994). The models reproduce the broad line wings, though some other
details are unexplained.
Using an estimate of dynamical phase based on the model, we show that the
phasing of the emission- and absorption-line variations is consistent with that
in (eclipsing) SW Sex stars. We therefore identify LS Peg as a low-inclination
SW Sex star.
Our model suggests i = 30 deg, and the observed absence of any photometric
signal at the orbital frequency establishes i < 60 deg. This constraint puts a
severe strain on interpretations of the SW Sex phenomenon which rely on disk
structures lying slightly out of the orbital plane.Comment: 29 pages, 13 figures, to be published in PASP Feb. 199
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