# Discovery, observations and modelling of a new eclipsing polar: MASTER   OT J061451.70-272535.5

**Authors:** H. Breytenbach, D.A.H. Buckley, P. Hakala, J.R. Thorstensen, A. Y., Kniazev, M. Motsoaledi, P.A. Woudt, S.B. Potter, V. Lipunov, E. Gorbovskoy,, P. Balanutsa, N. Tyurina

arXiv: 1901.02669 · 2019-01-10

## TL;DR

This paper reports the discovery and detailed observation of a new eclipsing polar, a magnetic cataclysmic variable, including its unique eclipse morphology, spectral features, and implications for accretion processes.

## Contribution

The study presents the first detailed photometric and spectroscopic analysis of a newly discovered eclipsing polar, revealing its unique eclipse profile and spectral characteristics, and enhances understanding of accretion stream obscuration.

## Key findings

- Eclipse period of approximately 2.08 hours.
- Distinct eclipse morphology with initial dip and subsequent deep eclipse.
- Spectral lines indicating a magnetic white dwarf with strong HeII emission.

## Abstract

We report the discovery of a new eclipsing polar, MASTER OT J061451.70-272535.5, detected as an optical transient by MASTER auto-detection software at the recently commissioned MASTER-SAAO telescope. Time resolved (10-20 s) photometry with the SAAO 1.9-m, and 1.0-m telescopes, utilizing the SHOC EM-CCD cameras, revealed that the source eclipses, with a period of 2.08 hours (7482.9$\pm$3.5$\,$s). The eclipse light curve has a peculiar morphology, comprising an initial dip, where the source brightness drops to ${\sim}$50% of the pre-eclipse level before gradually increasing again in brightness. A second rapid ingress follows, where the brightness drops by ${\sim}$60-80%, followed by a more gradual decrease to zero flux. We interpret the eclipse profile as the result of an initial obscuration of the accretion hot-spot on the magnetic white dwarf by the accretion stream, followed by an eclipse of both the hot-spot and the partially illuminated stream by the red dwarf donor star. This is similar to what has been observed in other eclipsing polars such as HU Aqr, but here the stream absorption is more pronounced. The object was subsequently observed with South African Large Telescope (SALT) using the Robert Stobie Spectrograph (RSS). This revealed a spectrum with all of the Balmer lines in emission, a strong HeII 4686\AA{} line with a peak flux greater than that of H$\beta$, as well as weaker HeI lines. The spectral features, along with the structure of the light curve, suggest that MASTER OT J061451.70-272535.5 is a new magnetic cataclysmic variable, most likely of the synchronised Polar subclass.

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.02669/full.md

## Figures

13 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.02669/full.md

## References

85 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.02669/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.02669