Spectroscopy of the helium-rich binary ES Ceti reveals accretion via a disc and evidence for eclipse
K. Bakowska, T. R. Marsh, D. Steeghs, G. Nelemans, P. J. Groot

TL;DR
Spectroscopy of ES Ceti confirms it accretes via a disc, exhibits eclipses, and has a 620-second orbital period, providing insights into helium-rich binary accretion mechanisms.
Contribution
First spectroscopic and spectropolarimetric evidence demonstrating disc accretion and eclipsing behavior in ES Ceti, clarifying its accretion structure and orbital characteristics.
Findings
ES Ceti's spectra show double-peaked emission lines indicating a disc.
The 620 s period is confirmed as the orbital period.
ES Ceti exhibits eclipses, the shortest among eclipsing AM CVn stars.
Abstract
Amongst the hydrogen-deficient accreting binaries known as the "AM~CVn stars" are three systems with the shortest known orbital periods: HM Cnc (321 s), V407 Vul (569 s) and ES Cet (620 s). These compact binaries are predicted to be strong sources of persistent gravitational wave radiation. HM Cnc and V407 Vul are undergoing direct impact accretion in which matter transferred from their donor hits the accreting white dwarfs directly. ES Cet, is the longest period of the three and is amongst the most luminous AM CVn stars, but it is not known whether it accretes via a disk or direct impact. ES Cet displays strong HeII 4686 line emission, which is sometimes a sign of magnetically-controlled accretion. Peculiarly, although around one third of hydrogen accreting white dwarfs show evidence for magnetism, none have been found amongst helium accretors. We present the results of Magellan and…
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