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The rise and fall of the king : the correlation between FO Aquarii's low states and the White Dwarf's Spindown

Authors :
Littlefield, Colin
Garnavich, Peter
Kennedy, Mark R.
Patterson, Joseph
Kemp, Jonathan
Stiller, Robert A.
Hambsch, Franz-Josef
Arranz Heras, Teofilo
Myers, Gordon
Stone, Geoffrey
Sjoberg, George
Dvorak, Shawn
Nelson, Peter
Popov, Velimir
Bonnardeau, Michel
Vanmunster, Tonny
de Miguel, Enrique
Alton, Kevin B.
Harris, Barbara
Cook, Lewis M.
Graham, Keith A.
Brincat, Stephen M.
Lane, David J.
Foster, James
Pickard, Roger D.
Sabo, Richard
Vietje, Brad
Lemay, Damien
Briol, John
Krumm, Nathan
Dadighat, Michelle
Goff, William
Solomon, Rob
Padovan, Stefano
Bolt, Greg
Kardasis, Emmanuel
Debackere, Andre
Thrush, Jeff
Stein, William
Walter, Bradley
Coulter, Daniel
Tsehmeystrenko, Valery
Gout, Jean-Francois
Lewin, Pablo
Galdies, Charles
Cejudo Fernandez, David
Walker, Gary
Boardman Jr., James
Pellett, Emil
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
AAS Journals, 2019.

Abstract

The intermediate polar FO Aquarii experienced its first-reported low-accretion states in 2016, 2017, and 2018. We establish that these low states occurred shortly after the system's white dwarf (WD) began spinning down, after having spent a quarter-century spinning up. FO Aquarii is the only intermediate polar whose period derivative has undergone a sign change, and it has now done so twice. By combining our spin-pulse timings with previous data, we determine that the WD's spin period has varied quasi-sinusoidally since the system's discovery, and an extrapolation predicts that the white dwarf was spinning down during newly discovered low states in photographic plates from 1964, 1965, and 1974. Thus, FO Aquarii's low states appear to occur exclusively during epochs of spindown. Additionally, our time-series photometry of the 2016-18 low states reveals that the mode of accretion is extremely sensitive to the accretion rate; when the system is fainter than V~14.0, the accretion onto the WD is largely stream-fed, but when it is brighter, it is almost exclusively disk-fed. The system's grazing eclipse remained detectable throughout all observations, confirming the uninterrupted presence of a disk-like structure, regardless of the accretion state. Our observations are consistent with theoretical predictions that during the low states, the accretion disk dissipates into a ring of diamagnetic blobs. Finally, a new XMM-Newton observation from 2017 indicates that the system's anomalously soft X-ray spectrum and diminished X-ray luminosity in the wake of the 2016 low state appear to be long-lasting changes compared to pre-2016 observations.<br />peer-reviewed

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od......3549..8afd2d80c9ebe20f9445f5425f10d460