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A Joint SRG/eROSITA + ZTF Search: Discovery of a 97-min Period Eclipsing Cataclysmic Variable with Evidence of a Brown Dwarf Secondary

Authors :
Galiullin, Ilkham
Rodriguez, Antonio C.
Kulkarni, Shrinivas R.
Sunyaev, Rashid
Gilfanov, Marat
Bikmaev, Ilfan
Yungelson, Lev
van Roestel, Jan
Gänsicke, Boris T.
Khamitov, Irek
Szkody, Paula
El-Badry, Kareem
Suslikov, Mikhail
Prince, Thomas A.
Buntov, Mikhail
Caiazzo, Ilaria
Gorbachev, Mark
Graham, Matthew J.
Gumerov, Rustam
Irtuganov, Eldar
Laher, Russ R.
Medvedev, Pavel
Riddle, Reed
Rusholme, Ben
Sakhibullin, Nail
Sklyanov, Alexander
Vanderbosch, Zachary P.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Cataclysmic variables (CVs) that have evolved past the period minimum during their lifetimes are predicted to be systems with a brown dwarf donor. While population synthesis models predict that around $\approx 40-70\%$ of the Galactic CVs are post-period minimum systems referred to as "period bouncers", only a few dozen confirmed systems are known. We report the study and characterisation of a new eclipsing CV, SRGeJ041130.3+685350 (SRGeJ0411), discovered from a joint SRG/eROSITA and ZTF program. The optical spectrum of SRGeJ0411 shows prominent hydrogen and helium emission lines, typical for CVs. We obtained optical high-speed photometry to confirm the eclipse of SRGeJ0411 and determine the orbital period to be $P_\textrm{orb} \approx 97.530$ minutes. The spectral energy distribution suggests that the donor has an effective temperature of $\lesssim 1,800$ K. We constrain the donor mass with the period--density relationship for Roche-lobe-filling stars and find that $M_\textrm{donor} \lesssim 0.04\ M_\odot$. The binary parameters are consistent with evolutionary models for post-period minimum CVs, suggesting that SRGeJ0411 is a new period bouncer. The optical emission lines of SRGeJ0411 are single-peaked despite the system being eclipsing, which is typically only seen due to stream-fed accretion in polars. X-ray spectroscopy hints that the white dwarf in SRGeJ0411 could be magnetic, but verifying the magnetic nature of SRGeJ0411 requires further investigation. The lack of optical outbursts has made SRGeJ0411 elusive in previous surveys, and joint X-ray and optical surveys highlight the potential for discovering similar systems in the near future.<br />Comment: 17 pages, 16 figures, accepted to MNRAS

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2401.04178
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stae012