Discovery and characterization of five new eclipsing AM CVn systems
J. van Roestel, T. Kupfer, M.J. Green, S. Wong, L. Bildsten, K., Burdge, T. Prince, T.R. Marsh, P. Szkody, C. Fremling, M.J. Graham, V.S., Dhillon, S.P. Littlefair, E.C. Bellm, M. Coughlin, D.A. Duev, D.A. Goldstein,, R.R. Laher, B. Rusholme, R. Riddle, R. Dekany, S.R. Kulkarni

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and detailed analysis of five new eclipsing AM CVn systems, revealing their unique spectral features, donor properties, and implications for their formation channels, thereby enhancing understanding of ultra-compact binaries.
Contribution
The study introduces five newly discovered eclipsing AM CVn systems with detailed spectroscopic and photometric characterization, including elements never before detected in such systems.
Findings
Five new eclipsing AM CVn systems discovered with periods 35.4-61.5 minutes.
Spectroscopy reveals elements like K and Zn, not previously observed in AM CVn systems.
Donor stars are more massive and have higher entropy than zero-entropy models suggest.
Abstract
AM CVn systems are ultra-compact, helium-rich, accreting binaries with degenerate or semi-degenerate donors. We report the discovery of five new eclipsing AM CVn systems with orbital periods of 61.5, 55.5, 53.3, 37.4, and 35.4 minutes. These systems were discovered by searching for deep eclipses in the Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF) lightcurves of white dwarfs selected using Gaia parallaxes. We obtained phase-resolved spectroscopy to confirm that all systems are AM CVn binaries, and we obtained high-speed photometry to confirm the eclipse and characterize the systems. The spectra of two long-period systems (61.5 and 53.3 minutes) show many emission and absorption lines, indicating the presence of N, O, Na, Mg, Si, and Ca, and also the K and Zn, elements which have never been detected in AM CVn systems before. By modelling the high-speed photometry, we measured the mass and radius of…
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