An analysis is presented of a numerical investigation of the dynamics and
geometry of accretion discs in binary systems with mass ratios q < 0.1,
applicable to ultra-compact X-ray binaries, AM CVn stars and very short period
cataclysmic variables. The steady-state geometry of the disc in the binary
reference frame is found to be quite different from that expected at higher
mass ratios. For q ~ 0.1, the disc takes on the usual elliptical shape, with
the major axis aligned perpendicular to the line of centres of the two stars.
However, at smaller mass ratios the elliptical gaseous orbits in the outer
regions of the disc are rotated in the binary plane. The angle of rotation
increases with gas temperature, but is found to vary inversely with q. At q =
0.01, the major axis of these orbits is aligned almost parallel to the line of
centres of the two stars. These effects may be responsible for the similar disc
structure inferred from Doppler tomography of the AM CVn star GP Com
(Morales-Rueda et al. 2003), which has q = 0.02. The steady-state geometry at
low mass ratios is not predicted by an inviscid, restricted three-body model of
gaseous orbits; it is related to the effects of tidal-viscous truncation of the
disc near the Roche lobe boundary. Since the disc geometry can be inferred
observationally for some systems, it is proposed that this may offer a useful
diagnostic for the determination of mass ratios in ultra-compact binaries.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figures, 7 in colour. Accepted for publication in MNRAS.
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