Using improved, up-to-date stellar input physics tested against observations
of low-mass stars and brown dwarfs we calculate the secular evolution of
low-mass donor cataclysmic variables (CVs), including those which form with a
brown dwarf donor. Our models confirm the mismatch between the calculated
minimum period (Pmin ~ 70 min) and the observed short-period cut-off (~ 80 min)
in the CV period histogram. We find that tidal and rotational corrections
applied to the one-dimensional stellar structure equations have no significant
effect on the period minimum. Theoretical period distributions synthesized from
our model sequences always show an accumulation of systems at the minimum
period, a feature absent from the observed distribution. We suggest that
non-magnetic CVs become unobservable as they are effectively trapped in
permanent quiescence before they reach Pmin, and that small-number statistics
may hide the period spike for magnetic CVs.Comment: 10 pages; accepted for publication in MNRA