Novae heat their food: mass transfer by irradiation
Sivan Ginzburg, Eliot Quataert

TL;DR
This paper models how nova eruptions irradiate donor stars in binary systems, significantly increasing mass transfer rates and potentially sustaining high transfer rates for thousands of years, explaining certain types of binary systems.
Contribution
It provides analytical and numerical calculations of irradiation-driven mass transfer, revealing a self-sustaining mechanism that explains recurrent novae and supersoft X-ray sources.
Findings
Mass transfer rate peaks at ~10^{-6} M_sun/yr during eruptions.
A self-sustaining mass transfer rate of ~10^{-7} M_sun/yr can persist for ~1000 years post-eruption.
Irradiation by accretion luminosity can maintain high mass transfer rates independently.
Abstract
A nova eruption irradiates and heats the donor star in a cataclysmic variable to high temperatures , causing its outer layers to expand and overflow the Roche lobe. We calculate the donor's heating and expansion both analytically and numerically, under the assumption of spherical symmetry, and find that irradiation drives enhanced mass transfer from the donor at a rate , which reaches at the peak of the eruption - about a thousand times faster than during quiescence. As the nova subsides and the white dwarf cools down, drops to lower values. We find that under certain circumstances, the decline halts and the mass transfer persists at a self-sustaining rate of for up to yr after the eruption. At this rate,…
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