735 research outputs found
IPHAS J062746.41+014811.3: a deeply eclipsing intermediate polar
We present time-resolved photometry of a cataclysmic variable discovered in
the Isaac Newton Telescope Photometric Halpha Survey of the northern galactic
plane, IPHAS J062746.41+014811.3 and classify the system as the fourth deeply
eclipsing intermediate polar known with an orbital period of Porb=8.16 h, and
spin period of Pspin=2210 s. The system shows mild variations of its
brightness, that appear to be accompanied by a change in the amplitude of the
spin modulation at optical wavelengths, and a change in the morphology of the
eclipse profile. The inferred magnetic moment of the white dwarf is mu_wd = 6-7
x 10^33 Gcm^3, and in this case IPHAS J0627 will either evolve into a
short-period EX Hya-like intermediate polar with a large Pspin\Porb ratio, or,
perhaps more likely, into a synchronised polar. Swift observations show that
the system is an ultraviolet and X-ray source, with a hard X-ray spectrum that
is consistent with those seen in other intermediate polars. The ultraviolet
light curve shows orbital modulation and an eclipse, while the low
signal-to-noise ratio X-ray light curve does not show a significant modulation
on the spin period. The measured X-ray flux is about an order of magnitude
lower than would be expected from scaling by the optical fluxes of well-known
X-ray selected intermediate polars.Comment: 34 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
An alternative model of the magnetic cataclysmic variable V1432 Aquilae (=RX J1940.1-1025)
V1432 Aql is currently considered to be an asynchronous AM Her type system,
with an orbital period of 12116.3 s and a spin period of 12150 s. I present an
alternative model in which V1432 Aql is an intermediate polar with disk
overflow or diskless accretion geometry, with a spin period near 4040 s. I
argue that published data are insufficient to distinguish between the two
models; instead, I provide a series of predictions of the two models that can
be tested against future observations.Comment: 10 pages LaTeX including 3 Postscript Figures, to be published in Ap
The accretion flow in the discless intermediate polar V2400 Ophiuchi
RXTE observations confirm that the X-ray lightcurve of V2400 Oph is pulsed at
the beat cycle, as expected in a discless intermediate polar. There are no
X-ray modulations at the orbital or spin cycles, but optical line profiles vary
with all three cycles. We construct a model for line-profile variations in a
discless accretor, based on the idea that the accretion stream flips from one
magnetic pole to the other, and show that this accounts for the observed
behaviour over the spin and beat cycles. The minimal variability over the
orbital cycle implies that 1) V2400 Oph is at an inclination of only ~10 deg,
and 2) much of the accretion flow is not in a coherent stream, but is circling
the white dwarf, possibly as a ring of denser, diamagnetic blobs. We discuss
the light this sheds on disc formation in intermediate polars.Comment: 10 pages, 12 figures, To appear in MNRAS, includes low-res figures to
reduce siz
Periodicities In The X-Ray Intensity Variations of TV Columbae: An Intermediate Polar
We present results from a temporal analysis of the longest and the most
sensitive X-ray observations of TV Columbae--an intermediate polar. The
observations were carried out with the RXTE PCA, ROSAT PSPC, and ASCA. Data
were analyzed using a 1-dimensional CLEAN and Bayesian algorithms. The presence
of a nearly sinusoidal modulation due to the spin of the white dwarf is seen
clearly in all the data, confirming the previous reports based on the EXOSAT
data. An improved period of 1909.7+/-2.5s is derived for the spin from the RXTE
data.The binary period of 5.5hr is detected unambiguously in X-rays for the
first time. Several side-bands due to the interaction of these periods are
observed in the power spectra, thereby suggesting contributions from both the
disk-fed and the stream-fed accretion for TV Col. The accretion disk could
perhaps be precessing as side-bands due to the influence of 4 day period on the
orbital period are seen. The presence of a significant power at certain
side-bands of the spin frequency indicates that the emission poles are
asymmetrically located. The strong power at the orbital side-bands seen in both
the RXTE and ROSAT data gives an indication for an absorption site fixed in the
orbital frame. Both the spin and the binary modulation are found to be
energy-dependent. Increased hardness ratio during a broad dip in the intensity
at binary phase of 0.75--1.0 confirms the presence of a strong attenuation due
to additional absorbers probably from an impact site of the accretion stream
with the disk or magnetosphere. Hardness ratio variations and the energy
dependent modulation depth during the spin modulation can be explained by
partially covered absorbers in the path of X-ray emission region in the
accretion stream.Comment: 34 pages, including 12 figures, Accepted for publication in
Astronomical Journal, scheduled for January 2004 issue (vol. 127
An EUV Study of the Intermediate Polar EX Hydrae
On 2000 May 5, we began a large multi-wavelength campaign to study the
intermediate polar, EX Hydrae. The simultaneous observations from six
satellites and four telescopes were centered around a one million second
observation with EUVE. Although EX Hydrae has been studied previously with
EUVE, our higher signal-to-noise observations present new results and challenge
the current IP models. Previously unseen dips in the light curve are
reminiscent of the stream dips seen in polar light curves. Also of interest is
the temporal extent of the bulge dip; approximately 0.5 in phase, implying that
the bulge extends over half of the accretion disk. We propose that the magnetic
field in EX Hydrae is strong enough (a few MG) to begin pulling material
directly from the outer edge of the disk, thereby forming a large accretion
curtain which would produce a very broad bulge dip. This would also result in
magnetically controlled accretion streams originating from the outer edge of
the disk. We also present a period analysis of the photometric data which shows
numerous beat frequencies with strong power and also intermittent and wandering
frequencies, an indication that physical conditions within EX Hya changed over
the course of the observation. Iron spectral line ratios give a temperature of
log T=6.5-6.9 K for all spin phases and a poorly constrained density of
n_e=10^10-10^11 cm^-3 for the emitting plasma. This paper is the first in a
series detailing our results from this multi-wavelength observational campaign.Comment: 27 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Why do some intermediate polars show soft X-ray emission? A survey of XMM-Newton spectra
We make a systematic analysis of the XMM-Newton X-ray spectra of intermediate
polars (IPs) and find that, contrary to the traditional picture, most show a
soft blackbody component. We compare the results with those from AM Her stars
and deduce that the blackbody emission arises from reprocessing of hard X-rays,
rather than from the blobby accretion sometimes seen in AM Hers. Whether an IP
shows a blackbody component appears to depend primarily on geometric factors: a
blackbody is not seen in those that have accretion footprints that are always
obscured by accretion curtains or are only visible when foreshortened on the
white-dwarf limb. Thus we argue against previous suggestions that the blackbody
emission characterises a separate sub-group of IPs which are more akin to AM
Hers, and develop a unified picture of the blackbody emission in these stars.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
XMM-Newton Observations of the Cataclysmic Variable GW Lib
XMM-Newton observations of the accreting, pulsating white dwarf in the
quiescent dwarf nova GW Librae were conducted to determine if the non-radial
pulsations present in previous UV and optical data affect the X-ray emission.
The non-radial pulsations are evident in the simultaneous Optical Monitor data
but are not detected in X-ray with an upper limit on the pulsation amplitude of
0.092 mags. The best fits to the X-ray spectrum are with a low temperature
diffuse gas model or a multi-temperature cooling flow model, with a strong
OVIII line, similar to other short period dwarf novae, but with a lower
temperature range than evident in normal short period dwarf novae. The lack of
pulsations and the spectrum likely indicate that the boundary layer does not
extend to the surface of the white dwarf.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures; accepted for publication in A
CC Sculptoris: A superhumping intermediate polar
We present high speed optical, spectroscopic and Swift X-ray observations
made during the dwarf nova superoutburst of CC Scl in November 2011. An orbital
period of 1.383 h and superhump period of 1.443 h were measured, but the
principal new finding is that CC Scl is a previously unrecognised intermediate
polar, with a white dwarf spin period of 389.49 s which is seen in both optical
and Swift X-ray light curves only during the outburst. In this it closely
resembles the old nova GK Per, but unlike the latter has one of the shortest
orbital periods among intermediate polars.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS; 11 pages, 19 figure
The TRAPPIST survey of southern transiting planets. I. Thirty eclipses of the ultra-short period planet WASP-43 b
We present twenty-three transit light curves and seven occultation light
curves for the ultra-short period planet WASP-43 b, in addition to eight new
measurements of the radial velocity of the star. Thanks to this extensive data
set, we improve significantly the parameters of the system. Notably, the
largely improved precision on the stellar density (2.41+-0.08 rho_sun) combined
with constraining the age to be younger than a Hubble time allows us to break
the degeneracy of the stellar solution mentioned in the discovery paper. The
resulting stellar mass and size are 0.717+-0.025 M_sun and 0.667+-0.011 R_sun.
Our deduced physical parameters for the planet are 2.034+-0.052 M_jup and
1.036+-0.019 R_jup. Taking into account its level of irradiation, the high
density of the planet favors an old age and a massive core. Our deduced orbital
eccentricity, 0.0035(-0.0025,+0.0060), is consistent with a fully circularized
orbit. We detect the emission of the planet at 2.09 microns at better than
11-sigma, the deduced occultation depth being 1560+-140 ppm. Our detection of
the occultation at 1.19 microns is marginal (790+-320 ppm) and more
observations are needed to confirm it. We place a 3-sigma upper limit of 850
ppm on the depth of the occultation at ~0.9 microns. Together, these results
strongly favor a poor redistribution of the heat to the night-side of the
planet, and marginally favor a model with no day-side temperature inversion.Comment: 14 pages, 6 tables, 11 figures. Accepted for publication in A&
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