X-ray spectroscopy and photometry of the long-period polar AI Tri with XMM-Newton
I. Traulsen, K. Reinsch, R. Schwarz, S. Dreizler, K. Beuermann, A.D., Schwope, V. Burwitz

TL;DR
This study uses XMM-Newton observations to analyze the spectral components, accretion geometry, and physical conditions of the soft polar AI Tri, revealing dominant soft X-ray emission, complex spectral structures, and evidence of one-pole accretion with self-eclipse effects.
Contribution
It provides a detailed multi-temperature spectral analysis and timing study of AI Tri, advancing understanding of accretion processes in soft polars with new observational insights.
Findings
Soft X-ray emission dominates 70% of the cycle.
Spectral components include superimposed black bodies and thermal plasma models.
Evidence supports one-pole accretion and self-eclipse phenomena.
Abstract
Context. The energy balance of cataclysmic variables with strong magnetic fields is a central subject in understanding accretion processes on magnetic white dwarfs. With XMM-Newton, we perform a spectroscopic and photometric study of soft X-ray selected polars during their high states of accretion. Aims. On the basis of X-ray and optical observations of the magnetic cataclysmic variable AI Tri, we derive the properties of the spectral components, their flux contributions, and the physical structure of the accretion region in soft polars. Methods. We use multi-temperature approaches in our xspec modeling of the spectra to describe the physical conditions and the structures of the post-shock accretion flow and the accretion spot on the white-dwarf surface. In addition, we investigate the accretion geometry of the system by a timing analysis of the photometric data. Results. Flaring soft…
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