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High-speed photometry of Gaia14aae: an eclipsing AMCVn that challenges formation models

Authors :
Navtej Singh
Thomas Kupfer
Danny Steeghs
N Prasert
Gregg Hallinan
A. Chakpor
Heather Campbell
J. Milburn
Richard Ashley
Chris M. Copperwheat
T. R. Marsh
J. J. Hermes
P. Kerry
S. P. Littlefair
L. K. Hardy
D. I. Sahman
J. van Roestel
Steven G. Parsons
Elmé Breedt
M. J. Green
Steven Bloemen
V. S. Dhillon
Source :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 476, 2, pp. 1663-1679, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 476, 1663-1679
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

AM CVn-type systems are ultra-compact, hydrogen-deficient accreting binaries with degenerate or semi-degenerate donors. The evolutionary history of these systems can be explored by constraining the properties of their donor stars. We present high-speed photometry of Gaia14aae, an AM CVn with a binary period of 49.7 minutes and the first AM CVn in which the central white dwarf is fully eclipsed by the donor star. Modelling of the lightcurves of this system allows for the most precise measurement to date of the donor mass of an AM CVn, and relies only on geometric and well-tested physical assumptions. We find a mass ratio $q = M_2/M_1 = 0.0287 \pm 0.0020$ and masses $M_1 = 0.87 \pm 0.02 M_\odot$ and $M_2 = 0.0250 \pm 0.0013 M_\odot$. We compare these properties to the three proposed channels for AM CVn formation. Our measured donor mass and radius do not fit with the contraction that is predicted for AM CVn donors descended from white dwarfs or helium stars at long orbital periods. The donor properties we measure fall in a region of parameter space in which systems evolved from hydrogen-dominated cataclysmic variables are expected, but such systems should show spectroscopic hydrogen, which is not seen in Gaia14aae. The evolutionary history of this system is therefore not clear. We consider a helium-burning star or an evolved cataclysmic variable to be the most likely progenitors, but both models require additional processes and/or fine-tuning to fit the data. Additionally, we calculate an updated ephemeris which corrects for an anomalous time measurement in the previously published ephemeris.<br />18 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication by MNRAS

Details

ISSN :
00358711
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 476, 2, pp. 1663-1679, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 476, 1663-1679
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1f3cb136443833c434af25839eeff27e