Orbital periods of cataclysmic variables identified by the SDSS. II. Measurements for six objects, including two eclipsing systems
John Southworth (1), T. R. Marsh (1), B. T. Gaensicke (1), A., Aungwerojwit (1, 2), P. Hakala (3), D. de Martino (4), H. Lehto (3) ((1), University of Warwick, (2) Naresuan University, (3) University of Turku, (4), Osservatorio di Capodimonte)

TL;DR
This paper reports the first orbital period measurements for six SDSS-discovered cataclysmic variables, revealing diverse characteristics and contributing to understanding their distribution, especially near the period minimum and gap.
Contribution
It provides new orbital period data for six CVs, including eclipsing and pulsating systems, expanding the sample of well-characterized SDSS CVs and highlighting their distinct properties.
Findings
Five systems have periods shorter than the 2-3 hr gap.
Two systems are near the minimum period for hydrogen-rich CVs.
One system is a novalike with V-shaped eclipses.
Abstract
Continuing our work from Paper I (Southworth et al., 2006) we present medium-resolution spectroscopy and broad-band photometry of seven cataclysmic variables (CVs) discovered by the SDSS. For six of these objects we derive accurate orbital periods, all which are measured for the first time. For SDSS J013132.39+090122.2, which contains a non-radially pulsating white dwarf, we find an orbital period of 81.54 +/- 0.13 min and a low radial velocity variation amplitude indicative of an extreme mass ratio. For SDSS J205914.87+061220.4, we find a period of 107.52 +/- 0.14 min. This object is a dwarf nova and was fading from its first recorded outburst throughout our observations. INT photometry of SDSS J155531.99-001055.0 shows that this system undergoes total eclipses which are 1.5 mag deep and occur on a period of 113.54 +/- 0.03 min. A NOT light curve of SDSS J075443.01+500729.2 shows that…
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