A census of AM CVn stars: three new candidates and one confirmed 48.3-minute binary
Arne Rau (1, 2), Gijs H.A. Roelofs (3), Paul J. Groot (4), Tom R., Marsh (5), Gijs Nelemans (4), Danny Steeghs (3, 5), Mansi M. Kasliwal (2), ((1) MPE Garching, (2) Caltech, (3) CfA Harvard, (4) Radboud University, Nijmegen, (5) University of Warwick)

TL;DR
This study reports the discovery of three new AM CVn binary candidates and confirms one system, using spectroscopic surveys and phase-resolved spectroscopy to determine their orbital periods and characteristics.
Contribution
It presents the identification and spectroscopic confirmation of new AM CVn systems, including precise orbital period measurements and temperature estimates, expanding the known population of these ultra-compact binaries.
Findings
Confirmed one system with a 48.31-minute orbital period.
Identified two systems likely below 40-minute periods based on spectral features.
Characterized the temperature and spectral properties of the new systems.
Abstract
We present three new candidate AM CVn binaries, plus one confirmed new system, from a spectroscopic survey of color-selected objects from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. All four systems were found from their helium emission lines in low-resolution spectra taken on the Hale telescope at Palomar, and the Nordic Optical Telescope and the William Herschel Telescope on La Palma. The ultra-compact binary nature of SDSS J090221.35+381941.9 was confirmed using phase-resolved spectroscopy at the Keck-I telescope. From the characteristic radial velocity `S-wave' observed in the helium emission lines we measure an orbital period of 48.31 +/- 0.08 min. The continuum emission can be described with a blackbody or a helium white dwarf atmosphere of T_eff ~ 15,000K, in agreement with theoretical cooling models for relatively massive accretors and/or donors. The absence in the spectrum of broad helium…
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