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ASASSN-18aan: An Eclipsing SU UMa-type Cataclysmic Variable with a 3.6-hour Orbital Period and a Late G-type Secondary Star

Authors :
Sho Sumiya
Mariko Kimura
Daisaku Nogami
Yoshinori Uzawa
Daiki Ito
Geoff Stone
Ikki Otsubo
Taichi Kato
Yuki Nishinaka
Kengo Nikai
Takahiro Kanai
Hanami Matsumoto
Ryou Ohsawa
Chihiro Ishioka
Tonny Vanmunster
Yuina Yamazaki
Mahito Sasada
Tatsuya Nakaoka
Sjoerd Dufoer
Tamás Tordai
Sergey Yu. Shugarov
Masanori Mizutani
Naoto Kojiguchi
Hiroshi Itoh
Ryuhei Ohnishi
Pavol A. Dubovsky
Yuki Sugiura
Hiroshi Akitaya
Masahiro Morita
Tomohito Ohshima
Makoto Ichiki
K. L. Murata
Yumiko Oasa
Miyako Tozuka
Kohei Oide
Takashi Horiuchi
Ian Miller
Yasuyuki Wakamatsu
T. Saito
John R. Thorstensen
Kengo Takagi
Masaki Takayama
Masayuki Yamanaka
Keisuke Isogai
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
arXiv, 2021.

Abstract

We report photometric and spectroscopic observations of the eclipsing SU UMa-type dwarf nova ASASSN-18aan. We observed the 2018 superoutburst with 2.3 mag brightening and found the orbital period ($P_{\rm orb}$) to be 0.149454(3) d, or 3.59 hr. This is longward of the period gap, establishing ASASSN-18aan as one of a small number of long-$P_{\rm orb}$ SU UMa-type dwarf novae. The estimated mass ratio, ($q=M_2/M_1 = 0.278(1)$), is almost identical to the upper limit of tidal instability by the 3:1 resonance. From eclipses, we found that the accretion disk at the onset of the superoutburst may reach the 3:1 resonance radius, suggesting that the superoutburst of ASASSN-18aan results from the tidal instability. Considering the case of long-$P_{\rm orb}$ WZ Sge-type dwarf novae, we suggest that the tidal dissipation at the tidal truncation radius is enough to induce SU UMa-like behavior in relatively high-$q$ systems such as SU UMa-type dwarf novae, but that this is no longer effective in low-$q$ systems such as WZ Sge-type dwarf novae. The unusual nature of the system extends to the secondary star, for which we find a spectral type of G9, much earlier than typical for the orbital period, and a secondary mass $M_2$ of around 0.18 M$_{\odot}$, smaller than expected for the orbital period and the secondary's spectral type. We also see indications of enhanced sodium abundance in the secondary's spectrum. Anomalously hot secondaries are seen in a modest number of other CVs and related objects. These systems evidently underwent significant nuclear evolution before the onset of mass transfer. In the case of ASASSN-18aan, this apparently resulted in a mass ratio lower than typically found at the system's $P_{\rm orb}$, which may account for the occurrence of a superoutburst at this relatively long period.<br />Comment: 17 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in PASJ

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2e0f32d0067f10f20fdbc2f42b5d6355
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.2102.04104