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Download fileThe remarkable outburst of the highly evolved post-period-minimum dwarf nova SSS J122221.7−311525
journal contribution
posted on 2017-05-30, 15:35 authored by V. V. Neustroev, T. R. Marsh, S. V. Zharikov, C. Knigge, E. Kuulkers, Julian Paul Osborne, K. L. Page, D. Steeghs, V. F. Suleimanov, G. Tovmassian, E. Breedt, A. Frebel, M. T. Garcia-Diaz, F.-J. Hambsch, H. Jacobson, S. G. Parsons, T. Ryu, L. Sabin, G. Sjoberg, A. S. Miroshnichenko, D. E. Reichart, J. B. Haislip, K. M. Ivarsen, A. P. LaCluyze, J. P. MooreWe report extensive 3-yr multiwavelength observations of the WZ Sge-type dwarf nova SSS J122221.7−311525 during its unusual double superoutburst, the following decline and in quiescence. The second segment of the superoutburst had a long duration of 33 d and a very gentle decline with a rate of 0.02 mag d−1, and it displayed an extended post-outburst decline lasting at least 500 d. Simultaneously with the start of the rapid fading from the superoutburst plateau, the system showed the appearance of a strong near-infrared excess resulting in very red colours, which reached extreme values (B − I ≃ 1.4) about 20 d later. The colours then became bluer again, but it took at least 250 d to acquire a stable level. Superhumps were clearly visible in the light curve from our very first time-resolved observations until at least 420 d after the rapid fading from the superoutburst. The spectroscopic and photometric data revealed an orbital period of 109.80 min and a fractional superhump period excess ≲0.8 per cent, indicating a very low mass ratio q ≲ 0.045. With such a small mass ratio the donor mass should be below the hydrogen-burning minimum mass limit. The observed infrared flux in quiescence is indeed much lower than is expected from a cataclysmic variable with a near-main-sequence donor star. This strongly suggests a brown-dwarf-like nature for the donor and that SSS J122221.7−311525 has already evolved away from the period minimum towards longer periods, with the donor now extremely dim.
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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 2017, 467 (1), pp. 597-618Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Physics and AstronomyVersion
- VoR (Version of Record)
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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical SocietyPublisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)issn
0035-8711eissn
1365-2966Acceptance date
2017-01-11Copyright date
2017Available date
2017-05-30Publisher DOI
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https://academic.oup.com/mnras/article-lookup/doi/10.1093/mnras/stx084Language
enAdministrator link
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Keywords
Science & TechnologyPhysical SciencesAstronomy & Astrophysicsbinaries: closestars: evolutionstars: individual: SSS J122221.7-311525novae, cataclysmic variablesCATACLYSMIC VARIABLESV344 LYRAEACCRETION DISKSURSAE-MAJORISFS-AURIGAEX-RAYSPECTROSCOPIC OBSERVATIONSECHO OUTBURSTSORBITAL PERIODSTANDARD STARS