A study of the evolution of the accretion disk of V2051 Oph through two outburst cycles
R. Baptista (UFSC, Soar), R. F. Santos (UFSC), M. Faundez-Abans, (LNA), A. Bortoletto (LNA, Iag/Usp)

TL;DR
This study investigates the accretion disk evolution of V2051 Oph during two outbursts, revealing the dynamics of heating and cooling waves, and suggesting mass transfer bursts as the outburst trigger.
Contribution
It provides detailed eclipse mapping analysis of two outbursts, showing the behavior of heating and cooling waves and challenging existing disk instability models.
Findings
Heating wave speed ~1.6 km/s
Cooling wave accelerates inward
Disk brightness temperatures below model predictions
Abstract
We follow the changes in the structure of the accretion disk of the dwarf nova V2051 Oph along two separate outbursts in order to investigate the causes of its recurrent outbursts. We apply eclipse mapping techniques to a set of light curves covering a normal (July 2000) and a low-amplitude (August 2002) outburst to derive maps of the disk surface brightness distribution at different phases along the outburst cycles. The sequence of eclipse maps of the 2000 July outburst reveal that the disk shrinks at outburst onset while an uneclipsed component of 13 per cent of the total light develops. The derived radial intensity distributions suggest the presence of an outward-moving heating wave during rise and of an inward-moving cooling wave during decline. The inferred speed of the outward-moving heating wave is ~ 1.6 km/s, while the speed of the cooling wave is a fraction of that. A…
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