Roche tomography of cataclysmic variables - V. A high-latitude star-spot on RU Pegasi
Alexander Dunford, Christopher A Watson, Robert Connon Smith

TL;DR
This study uses Roche tomography to map the secondary star in RU Pegasi, revealing a high-latitude star-spot and symmetric irradiation patterns, and refines system parameters consistent with previous findings.
Contribution
First high-latitude star-spot detection on RU Pegasi using Roche tomography, and detailed analysis of irradiation symmetry and system parameters.
Findings
Detected a large high-latitude star-spot at about 82 degrees.
Found irradiation pattern to be axi-symmetric and confined to visible regions.
Refined system parameters consistent with previous measurements.
Abstract
We present Roche tomograms of the secondary star in the dwarf nova system RU Pegasi derived from blue and red arm ISIS data taken on the 4.2-m William Herschel Telescope. We have applied the entropy landscape technique to determine the system parameters and obtained component masses of M1 = 1.06 Msun, M2 = 0.96 Msun, an orbital inclination angle of i = 43 degrees, and an optimal systemic velocity of gamma = 7 km/s. These are in good agreement with previously published values. Our Roche tomograms of the secondary star show prominent irradiation of the inner Lagrangian point due to illumination by the disc and/or bright spot, which may have been enhanced as RU Peg was in outburst at the time of our observations.We find that this irradiation pattern is axi-symmetric and confined to regions of the star which have a direct view of the accretion regions. This is in contrast to previous…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
