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Superoutburst of SDSS J090221.35+381941.9: First measurement of mass ratio in an AM CVn-type object using growing superhumps

Authors :
Elena P. Pavlenko
Kirill A. Antonyuk
Julia V. Babina
Raul Michel
Sergey Yu. Shugarov
Drahomir Chochol
Nikolaj V. Pit
Enrique de Miguel
Yutaka Maeda
Oksana I. Antonyuk
Gianluca Masi
Seiichiro Kiyota
Pavol A. Dubovsky
Aleksei A. Sosnovskij
D. Denisenko
Arto Oksanen
Kazunari Matsumoto
Miho Kawabata
Patrick Schmeer
Roger D. Pickard
Joseph Ulowetz
Megumi Takenaka
Francesca Nocentini
Alex Baklanov
Colin Littlefield
Arne Henden
William Stein
Shawn Dvorak
Daiki Fukushima
Kazuki Maeda
Igor Kudzej
Risa Matsuda
Rudolf Novak
Hiroshi Itoh
Tomohito Ohshima
Daisuke Daisuke
Ian Miller
Katsura Matsumoto
Taichi Kato
Source :
Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan. 66
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2014.

Abstract

We report on a superoutburst of the AM CVn-type object SDSS J090221.35+381941.9 [J0902; orbital period 0.03355(6) d] in 2014 March-April. The entire outburst consisted of a precursor outburst and the main superoutburst, followed by a short rebrightening. During the rising branch of the main superoutburst, we detected growing superhumps (stage A superhumps) with a period of 0.03409(1) d. During the plateau phase of the superoutburst, superhumps with a shorter period (stage B superhumps) were observed. Using the orbital period and the period of the stage A superhumps, we were able to measure the dynamical precession rate of the accretion disk at the 3:1 resonance, and obtained a mass ratio (q) of 0.041(7). This is the first successful measurement of the mass ratio in an AM CVn-type object using the recently developed stage A superhump method. The value is generally in good agreement with the theoretical evolutionary model. The orbital period of J0902 is the longest among the outbursting AM CVn-type objects, and the borderline between the outbursting systems and systems with stable cool disks appears to be longer than had been supposed.<br />Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in PASJ

Details

ISSN :
2053051X and 00046264
Volume :
66
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5e5d5ceba5319a766a30fa3e955094f3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/pasj/psu077