Discovery of a bright eclipsing cataclysmic variable
D. K. Sing, E. M. Green, S. B. Howell, J. B. Holberg, M., Lopez-Morales, J. S. Shaw, G. D. Schmidt

TL;DR
The paper reports the discovery and detailed analysis of a bright, eclipsing cataclysmic variable binary system, providing precise mass measurements and insights into its evolutionary status.
Contribution
This study presents the first detailed spectral and dynamical analysis of J0644+3344, a bright eclipsing CV, including mass determination and classification as a likely young, interacting binary.
Findings
Masses of primary and secondary stars are precisely measured.
The system resembles a nova-like UX UMa or SW Sex type CV.
J0644+3344 is likely a young interacting binary with a longer orbital period.
Abstract
We report on the discovery of J0644+3344, a bright deeply eclipsing cataclysmic variable (CV) binary. Spectral signatures of both binary components and an accretion disk can be seen at optical wavelengths. The optical spectrum shows broad H I, He I, and He II accretion disk emission lines with deep narrow absorption components from H I, He I, Mg II and Ca II. The absorption lines are seen throughout the orbital period, disappearing only during primary eclipse. These absorption lines are either the the result of an optically-thick inner accretion disk or from the photosphere of the primary star. Radial velocity measurements show that the H I, He I, and Mg II absorption lines phase with the the primary star, while weak absorption features in the continuum phase with the secondary star. Radial velocity solutions give a 150+/-4 km/s semi-amplitude for the primary star and 192.8+/-5.6 km/s…
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