The accretion disk in the post period-minimum cataclysmic variable SDSS J080434.20+510349.2
S. Zharikov (1), G. Tovmassian (1), A. Aviles (1), R. Michel (1), D., Gonzalez-Buitrago (1), Ma. T. Garcia-Diaz (1) ((1) IA UNAM, Ensenada,, Mexico)

TL;DR
This paper investigates the accretion disk structure in the bounce-back cataclysmic variable SDSS J080434.20+510349.2, revealing a large, spiral-wave containing disk with specific physical properties through photometric, spectroscopic, and modeling analyses.
Contribution
It introduces a geometric model of a bounce-back system with spiral density waves in the accretion disk, explaining observed light curves and Doppler tomograms.
Findings
The system shows double-hump light curves with varying amplitudes.
Doppler tomography indicates a large, uneven brightness accretion disk with spiral waves.
The accretion disk extends to the 2:1 resonance radius and is cool (~2500K).
Abstract
This study of SDSS0804 is primarily concerned with the double-hump shape in the light curve and its connection with the accretion disk in this bounce-back system. Time-resolved photometric and spectroscopic observations were obtained to analyze the behavior of the system between superoutbursts. A geometric model of a binary system containing a disk with two outer annuli spiral density waves was applied to explain the light curve and the Doppler tomography. Observations were carried out during 2008-2009, after the object's magnitude decreased to V~17.7(0.1) from the March 2006 eruption. The light curve clearly shows a sinusoid-like variability with a 0.07 mag amplitude and a 42.48 min periodicity, which is half of the orbital period of the system. In Sept. 2010, the system underwent yet another superoutburst and returned to its quiescent level by the beginning of 2012. This light curve…
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