New Ultraviolet Observations of AM CVn
Richard A. Wade (1), Michael Eracleous (1,2), Helene M. L. G. Flohic, (3) ((1) Department of Astronomy & Astrophysics, The Pennsylvania State, University; (2) Center for Gravitational Wave Physics, The Pennsylvania State, University)

TL;DR
This study presents ultraviolet spectral observations of AM CVn, revealing wind features, variability, and oscillations, which contribute to understanding the accretion processes and evolutionary state of this ultra-short-period binary system.
Contribution
First ultraviolet spectral analysis of AM CVn using HST, highlighting wind signatures, variability, and oscillations to inform accretion modeling.
Findings
Detection of blue-shifted absorption lines indicating a wind
Observation of a 27/54 s oscillation with wavelength-dependent amplitude
Spectral energy distribution assembled from UV to near-infrared
Abstract
We have obtained observations of the ultraviolet spectrum of AM CVn, an ultra-short-period helium cataclysmic variable, using the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) aboard the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). We obtained data in time-tag mode during two consecutive orbits of HST, covering 1600-3150 and 1140-1710 Angstrom, respectively. The mean spectrum is approximately flat in f-nu. The absorption profiles of the strong lines of N V, Si IV, C IV, He II, and N IV are blue-shifted and in some cases asymmetric, evidencing a wind that is partly occulted by the accretion disk. There is weak red-shifted emission from N V and He II. The profiles of these lines vary mildly with time. The light curve shows a decline of ~20% over the span of the observations. There is also flickering and a 27 s (or 54 s) "dwarf nova oscillation", revealed in a power-spectrum analysis. The amplitude of this…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtomic and Molecular Physics · Inorganic Fluorides and Related Compounds · Advanced Chemical Physics Studies
