Total eclipse of the heart: The AM CVn Gaia14aae / ASSASN-14cn
H. C. Campbell, T. R. Marsh, M. Fraser, S.T. Hodgkin, E. de Miguel, B., T. G\"ansicke, D. Steeghs, A. Hourihane, E. Breedt, S. P. Littlefair, S. E., Koposov, L. Wyrzykowski, G. Altavilla, N. Blagorodnova, G. Clementini, G., Damljanovic, A. Delgado, M. Dennefeld, A. J. Drake, J.

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and detailed characterization of Gaia14aae, a deeply eclipsing AM CVn system with a 49.71-minute orbital period, providing insights into its structure, mass, and outburst behavior, and marking it as only the third known eclipsing AM CVn star.
Contribution
The paper presents the first detailed analysis of Gaia14aae, the first eclipsing AM CVn with a totally eclipsed white dwarf, including orbital parameters, mass estimates, and outburst activity.
Findings
Gaia14aae has an orbital period of 49.71 minutes.
The white dwarf is totally eclipsed, allowing precise measurements.
Three outbursts occurred within 4 months, with no activity in 8 years.
Abstract
We report the discovery and characterisation of a deeply eclipsing AM CVn-system, Gaia14aae (= ASSASN-14cn). Gaia14aae was identified independently by the All-Sky Automated Survey for Supernovae (ASAS-SN; Shappee et al. 2014) and by the Gaia Science Alerts project, during two separate outbursts. A third outburst is seen in archival Pan-STARRS-1 (PS1; Schlafly et al. 2012; Tonry et al. 2012; Magnier et al. 2013) and ASAS-SN data. Spectroscopy reveals a hot, hydrogen-deficient spectrum with clear double-peaked emission lines, consistent with an accreting double degenerate classification. We use follow-up photometry to constrain the orbital parameters of the system. We find an orbital period of 49.71 min, which places Gaia14aae at the long period extremum of the outbursting AM CVn period distribution. Gaia14aae is dominated by the light from its accreting white dwarf. Assuming an orbital…
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