2001MNRAS.325.1458B -
Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 325, 1458-1462 (2001/August-3)
A ROSAT WFC observation of SW UMa: the EUV behaviour of dwarf novae in superoutburst explained.
BURLEIGH M.R., PYE J.P., POULTON S.W., SOHL K.B., WHEATLEY P.J. and WYNN G.A.
Abstract (from CDS):
During re-processing and analysis of the entire ROSAT Wide Field Camera (WFC) pointed observations data base, we discovered a serendipitous, off-axis detection of the cataclysmic variable SW UMa at the onset of its 1997 October superoutburst. Although long outbursts in this SU UMa-type system are known to occur every ∼450d, none had ever been previously observed in the extreme ultra-violet (EUV) by ROSAT. The WFC observations began just ~13hr after the optical rise was detected. With a peak count rate of ∼4.5counts–1 in the S1 filter, SW UMa was temporarily the third brightest object in the sky in this waveband. Over the next ~19hr the measured EUV flux dropped to <2counts–1, while the optical brightness remained essentially static at mv∼11. Similar behaviour has also been recently reported in the EUV light curve of the related SU UMa-type binary OY Car during superoutburst, as reported by Mauche & Raymond. In contrast, U Gem-type dwarf novae show no such early EUV dip during normal outbursts. Therefore, this feature may be common in superoutbursts of SU UMa-like systems. We expand on ideas first put forward by Osaki and Mauche & Raymond and offer an explanation for this behaviour by examining the interplay between the thermal and tidal instabilities that affect the accretion discs in these systems.
Abstract Copyright:
The Royal Astronomical Society
Journal keyword(s):
accretion, accretion discs - binaries: close - stars: individual: SW UMa - novae, cataclysmic variables - ultraviolet: stars
Simbad objects:
9
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