Abstract

ABSTRACT We present time-resolved optical and ultraviolet (UV) spectroscopy and photometry of V1460 Her, an eclipsing cataclysmic variable with a 4.99-h orbital period and an overluminous K5-type donor star. The optical spectra show emission lines from an accretion disc along with absorption lines from the donor. We use these to measure radial velocities, which, together with constraints upon the orbital inclination from photometry, imply masses of $M_1=0.869\pm 0.006\, \mathrm{M}_\odot$ and $M_2=0.295\pm 0.004\, \mathrm{M}_\odot$ for the white dwarf and the donor. The radius of the donor, $R_2=0.43\pm 0.002\, \mathrm{\it R}_\odot$, is ≈50 per cent larger than expected given its mass, while its spectral type is much earlier than the M3.5 type that would be expected from a main-sequence star with a similar mass. Hubble Space Telescope (HST) spectra show strong N v 1240-Å emission but no C iv 1550-Å emission, evidence for CNO-processed material. The donor is therefore a bloated, overluminous remnant of a thermal time-scale stage of high mass transfer and has yet to reestablish thermal equilibrium. Remarkably, the HST UV data also show a strong 30 per cent peak-to-peak, $38.9\,$s pulsation that we explain as being due to the spin of the white dwarf, potentially putting V1460 Her in a similar category to the propeller system AE Aqr in terms of its spin frequency and evolutionary path. AE Aqr also features a post-thermal time-scale mass donor, and V1460 Her may therefore be its weak magnetic field analogue since the accretion disc is still present, with the white dwarf spin-up a result of a recent high accretion rate.

Highlights

  • Cataclysmic variable stars (CVs) contain white dwarf primary stars usually accreting from hydrogen-rich mainsequence-like secondaries

  • One possible explanation for the short time scale of mass transfer and the evidence for CNO burning is that V1460 Her may have started accretion from a donor that was more massive than the white dwarf leading to a high rate of mass transfer and significant stellar evolution (Sanad 2011; Schenker et al 2002)

  • We find that V1460 Her belongs to a select group of CVs in which the donor star is significantly over-luminous and over-sized for its mass

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Summary

Introduction

Cataclysmic variable stars (CVs) contain white dwarf primary stars usually accreting from hydrogen-rich mainsequence-like secondaries. As CVs evolve, their secondary stars continually lose mass and need to adjust their structures to maintain thermal equilibrium. Whether they manage to do so depends upon the thermal timescale of the secondary star compared to the mass loss timescale, M2/−M2, where M2 is the mass (Knigge 2006). The discovery of K-type donor stars in the shortperiod CVs EI Psc, (Thorstensen et al 2002b) and QZ Ser (Thorstensen et al 2002a), with periods of 1.1 and 2.0 h, and. Anomalous carbon and nitrogen abundances were confirmed in EI PSc in the far-ultraviolet (Gansicke et al 2003) and infrared

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