726 research outputs found
High Speed Photometry of SDSS J013701.06-091234.9
We present high speed photometry of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey cataclysmic
variable SDSS J013701.06-091234.9 in quiescence and during its 2003 December
superoutburst. The orbital modulation at 79.71\pm0.01 min is double humped; the
superhump period is 81.702\pm0.007 min. Towards the end of the outburst late
superhumps with a period of 81.29\pm0.01 min were observed. We argue that this
is a system of very low mass transfer rate, and that it probably has a long
outburst interval.Comment: 5 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
In-the-Gap SU UMa-Type Dwarf Nova, Var73 Dra with a Supercycle of about 60 Days
An intensive photometric-observation campaign of the recently discovered SU
UMa-type dwarf nova, Var73 Dra was conducted from 2002 August to 2003 February.
We caught three superoutbursts in 2002 October, December and 2003 February. The
recurrence cycle of the superoutburst (supercycle) is indicated to be 60
d, the shortest among the values known so far in SU UMa stars and close to
those of ER UMa stars. The superhump periods measured during the first two
superoutbursts were 0.104885(93) d, and 0.10623(16) d, respectively. A
0.10424(3)-d periodicity was detected in quiescence. The change rate of the
superhump period during the second superoutburst was , which
is an order of magnitude larger than the largest value ever known. Outburst
activity has changed from a phase of frequent normal outbursts and infrequent
superoutbursts in 2001 to a phase of infrequent normal outbursts and frequent
superoutbursts in 2002. Our observations are negative to an idea that this star
is an related object to ER UMa stars in terms of the duty cycle of the
superoutburst and the recurrence cycle of the normal outburst. However, to
trace the superhump evolution throughout a superoutburst, and from quiescence
more effectively, may give a fruitful result on this matter.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, submitted to A&
Superhumps in Cataclysmic Binaries. XXIII. V442 Ophiuchi and RX J1643.7+3402
We report the results of long observing campaigns on two novalike variables:
V442 Ophiuchi and RX J1643.7+3402. These stars have high-excitation spectra,
complex line profiles signifying mass loss at particular orbital phases, and
similar orbital periods (respectively 0.12433 and 0.12056 d). They are
well-credentialed members of the SW Sex class of cataclysmic variables. Their
light curves are also quite complex. V442 Oph shows periodic signals with
periods of 0.12090(8) and 4.37(15) days, and RX J1643.7+3402 shows similar
signals at 0.11696(8) d and 4.05(12) d. We interpret these short and long
periods respectively as a "negative superhump" and the wobble period of the
accretion disk. The superhump could then possibly arise from the heating of the
secondary (and structures fixed in the orbital frame) by inner-disk radiation,
which reaches the secondary relatively unimpeded since the disk is not
coplanar.
At higher frequencies, both stars show another type of variability:
quasi-periodic oscillations (QPOs) with a period near 1000 seconds. Underlying
these strong signals of low stability may be weak signals of higher stability.
Similar QPOs, and negative superhumps, are quite common features in SW Sex
stars. Both can in principle be explained by ascribing strong magnetism to the
white dwarf member of the binary; and we suggest that SW Sex stars are
borderline AM Herculis binaries, usually drowned by a high accretion rate. This
would provide an ancestor channel for AM Hers, whose origin is still
mysterious.Comment: PDF, 41 pages, 4 tables, 16 figures; accepted, in press, to appear
December 2002, PASP; more info at http://cba.phys.columbia.edu
The helium-rich cataclysmic variable SBSS 1108+574
We present time-resolved spectroscopy and photometry of the dwarf nova SBSS 1108+574, obtained during the 2012 outburst. Its quiescent spectrum is unusually rich in helium, showing broad, double-peaked emission lines from the accretion disc. We measure a line flux ratio He I 5875/Hα = 0.81 ± 0.04, a much higher ratio than typically observed in cataclysmic variable stars (CVs). The outburst spectrum shows hydrogen and helium in absorption, with weak emission of Hα and He I 6678, as well as strong He II emission.
From our photometry, we find the superhump period to be 56.34 ± 0.18 min, in agreement with the previously published result. The spectroscopic period, derived from the radial velocities of the emission lines, is found to be 55.3 ± 0.8 min, consistent with a previously identified photometric orbital period, and significantly below the normal CV period minimum. This indicates that the donor in SBSS 1108+574 is highly evolved. The superhump excess derived from our photometry implies a mass ratio of q = 0.086 ± 0.014. Our spectroscopy reveals a grazing eclipse of the large outbursting disc. As the disc is significantly larger during outburst, it is unlikely that an eclipse will be detectable in quiescence. The relatively high accretion rate implied by the detection of outbursts, together with the large mass ratio, suggests that SBSS 1108+574 is still evolving towards its period minimum
The Helium-Rich Cataclysmic Variable ES Ceti
We report photometry of the helium-rich cataclysmic variable ES Ceti during
2001-2004. The star is roughly stable at V ~ 17.0 and has a light curve
dominated by a single period of 620 s, which remains measurably constant over
the 3 year baseline. The weight of evidence suggests that this is the true
orbital period of the underlying binary, not a "superhump" as initially
assumed. We report GALEX ultraviolet magnitudes, which establish a very blue
flux distribution (F_nu ~ nu^1.3), and therefore a large bolometric correction.
Other evidence (the very strong He II 4686 emission, and a ROSAT detection in
soft X-rays) also indicates a strong EUV source, and comparison to
helium-atmosphere models suggests a temperature of 130+-10 kK. For a distance
of 350 pc, we estimate a luminosity of (0.8-1.7)x10^34 erg/s, yielding a mass
accretion rate of (2-4)x10^-9 M_sol/yr onto an assumed 0.7 M_sol white dwarf.
This appears to be about as expected for white dwarfs orbiting each other in a
10 minute binary, assuming that mass transfer is powered by gravitational
radiation losses. We estimate mean accretion rates for other helium-rich
cataclysmic variables, and find that they also follow the expected M-dot ~
P_o^-5 relation. There is some evidence (the lack of superhumps, and the small
apparent size of the luminous region) that the mass transfer stream in ES Cet
directly strikes the white dwarf, rather than circularizing to form an
accretion disk.Comment: PDF, 26 pages, 3 tables, 9 figures; accepted, in press, to appear
February 2005, PASP; more info at http://cba.phys.columbia.edu
Arbitrarily Degenerate Helium White Dwarfs as Donors in AM CVn Binaries
We apply the Deloye & Bildsten (2003) isentropic models for donors in
ultracompact low-mass X-ray binaries to the AM CVn population of ultracompact,
interacting binaries. The mass-radius relations of these systems' donors in the
mass range of interest (M_2<0.1 \msun) are not single-valued, but
parameterized by the donor's specific entropy. This produces a range in the
relationships between system observables, such as orbital period, \Porb, and
mass transfer rate, \Mdot. For a reasonable range in donor specific entropy,
\Mdot can range over several orders of magnitude at fixed \Porb. We
determine the unique relation between \Mdot and in the AM CVn systems
with known donor to accretor mass ratios, . We use structural
arguments, as well as each system's photometric behavior, to place limits on
\Mdot and in each. Most systems allow a factor of about 3 variation in
\Mdot, although V803 Cen, if the current estimates of its are accurate,
is an exception and must have M_2 \approx 0.02 \msun and \Mdot \approx
10^{-10} \msun yr. Our donor models also constrain each donor's core
temperature, , range and correlate with . We examine how
variations in donor specific entropy across the white dwarf family
\citep{nele01a} of AM CVn systems affects this population's current galactic
distribution. Allowing for donors that are not fully degenerate produces a
shift in systems towards longer \Porb and higher \Mdot increasing the
parameter space in which these systems can be found. This shift increases the
fraction of systems whose \Porb is long enough that their gravity wave (GW)
signal is obscured by the background of detached double white dwarf binaries
that dominate the GW spectrum below a frequency mHz.Comment: 13 pages, 10 figures, uses emulateapj.cls. Accepted to Astrophysical
Journa
Simulations of eccentric disks in close binary systems
We study the development of finite eccentricity in accretion disks in close
binary systems using a two-dimensional grid-based numerical scheme. We perform
detailed parameter studies to explore the dependence on viscosity, disk aspect
ratio, the inclusion of a mass-transfer stream and the role of the boundary
conditions. We consider mass ratios 0.05<q<0.3 appropriate to superoutbursting
cataclysmic binary systems.
Instability to the formation of a precessing eccentric disk that attains a
quasi-steady state with mean eccentricity in the range 0.3-0.5 occurs readily.
The shortest growth times are ~15 binary orbits for the largest viscosities and
the instability mechanism is for the most part consistent with the
mode-coupling mechanism associated with the 3:1 resonance proposed by Lubow.
However, the results are sensitive to the treatment of the inner boundary and
to the incorporation of the mass-transfer stream. In the presence of a stream
we found a critical viscosity below which the disk remains circular.
Incorporation of a mass-transfer stream tends to impart stability for small
enough viscosity (or, equivalently, mass-transfer rate through the disk) and
does assist in obtaining a prograde precession rate that is in agreement with
observations. For the larger q the location of the 3:1 resonance is pushed
outwards towards the Roche lobe where higher-order mode couplings and
nonlinearity occur. It is likely that three-dimensional simulations that
properly resolve the disk's vertical structure are required to make significant
progress in this case.Comment: 19 pages, 27 Figures, accepted by A&
Detection of superhumps in XTE J1118+480 approaching quiescence
We present the results of our monitoring of the halo black-hole soft X-ray
transient (SXT) XTE J1118+480 during its decline to quiescence. The system has
decayed 0.5 mags from December 2000 to its present near quiescent level at
R=18.65 (June 2001). The ellipsoidal lightcurve is distorted by an additional
modulation that we interpret as a superhump of P_sh=0.17049(1) d i.e. 0.3%
longer than the orbital period. This implies a disc precession period P_prec=
52 d. After correcting the average phase-folded light curve for veiling, the
amplitude difference between the minima suggests that the binary inclination
angle lies in the range i=71-82 deg. However, we urge caution in the
interpretation of these values because of residual systematic contamination of
the ellipsoidal lightcurve by the complex form of the superhump modulation. The
orbital--mean H-alpha profiles exhibit clear velocity variations with ~500 km/s
amplitude. We interpret this as the first spectroscopic evidence of an
eccentric precessing disc.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
Six new candidate ultracompact X-ray binaries
Ultracompact X-ray binaries (UCXBs) appear able to sustain accretion onto the
compact accretor at rates lower than in wider X-ray binaries. This may be
understood by the smaller accretion disks in UCXBs: a lower X-ray luminosity
suffices to keep a disk completely ionized through irradiation and, thus, keep
the viscosity at a sufficiently high level to allow effective transport of
matter to the compact object. We employ this distinguishing factor on data from
RXTE and BeppoSAX to identify six new candidate UCXBs, thus increasing the
population by one quarter. The candidates are drawn from the population of
persistently accreting and type-I X-ray bursting low-mass X-ray binaries. The
X-ray bursts establish the low-mass X-ray binary nature and provide a handle on
the accretion rate. We find that the low accretion rates are supported by the
long burst recurrence times and the hard X-ray spectra of the persistent
emission as derived from the 2nd INTEGRAL catalog of soft gamma-ray sources. We
discuss the peculiar light curves of some new UCXB candidates.Comment: Section 2 corrected and improved thanks to comments by J.-P. Lasota.
Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysic
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