Abstract

Abstract The aim of this paper is to investigate the impact of energy transfer on the evolution of contact binaries. Horizontal turbulence is triggered by the differential rotation induced by meridional circulation, which is a direct consequence of nonuniform heating at the inner critical Roche lobes because of strong rotational and tidal distortions. Thermal energy is transferred by the horizontal turbulence from the more massive star to the less massive one, and horizontal turbulence can be responsible for the redistribution of what is a significant fraction of the total core luminosity. The secondary becomes overluminous and oversized owing to energy transfer from the companion star, whereas the primary shifts toward smaller luminosity and is undersized. The convective regions for primaries are enlarged by the improved radiative temperature gradient. The main region for energy transport is located at the bottom of the common envelope because of a higher local density and enthalpy difference. One can find that thermal structure can be disturbed and display periodic thermal relaxation oscillations between the semidetached stage and the contact stage. W-type W UMa contact binaries acquire efficient energy transfer, which can cause the temperature of secondaries to exceed that of the primaries. However, angular momentum loss owing to nonconservative mass transfer can make the system maintain shallow contact and not evolve from overcontact to semidetached configurations, and the system may appear as an A-type W UMa contact binary.

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