Dark spot, Spiral waves and the SW Sex behaviour: it is all about UX Ursae Majoris
V. V. Neustroev, V. F. Suleimanov, N. V. Borisov, K. V. Belyakov, A., Shearer

TL;DR
This study analyzes optical spectra of UX UMa, revealing different accretion disc structures and behaviors over time, including spiral waves and SW Sex features, with implications for understanding its system parameters.
Contribution
The paper provides a detailed Doppler tomography analysis of UX UMa, identifying distinct accretion disc components and their evolution, highlighting the variability of SW Sex features over years.
Findings
Detection of spiral structures in the accretion disc.
Disappearance of SW Sex features in 2008 observations.
Inconsistent system parameters with previous eclipse-based estimates.
Abstract
We present an analysis of time-resolved, medium resolution optical spectroscopic observations of UX UMa in the blue (3920-5250 A) and red (6100-7200 A) wavelength ranges, that were obtained in April 1999 and March 2008 respectively. The observed characteristics of our spectra indicate that UX UMa has been in different states during those observations. The blue spectra are very complex. They are dominated by strong and broad single-peaked emission lines of hydrogen. The high-excitation lines of HeII 4686 and the Bowen blend are quite strong as well. All the lines consist of a mixture of absorption and emission components. Using Doppler tomography we have identified four distinct components of the system: the accretion disc, the secondary star, the bright spot from the gas stream/disc impact region, and the unique compact area of absorption in the accretion disc seen as a dark spot in the…
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