The C/N ratio from FUV spectroscopy as a constraint upon the past evolution of HS0218+3229
O. Toloza, Boris T. Gaensicke, Laura M. Guzman-Rincon, Tom R. Marsh,, Paula Szkody, Matthias R. Schreiber, Domitilla de Martino, Monica Zorotovic,, Kareem El-Badry, Detlev Koester, Felipe Lagos

TL;DR
This study uses FUV spectroscopy and evolutionary modeling to analyze the past of the cataclysmic variable HS0218+3229, revealing its chemical composition and likely evolutionary path, including initial binary parameters and future evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a method combining FUV spectroscopy with MESA simulations to constrain the past evolution of HS0218+3229, a system linked to supersoft X-ray binaries.
Findings
The C/N ratio is about one tenth of the Solar value.
Initial binary parameters were estimated using Gaussian process fits.
HS0218+3229 is predicted to evolve into a CV below the 80-minute period minimum.
Abstract
Some white dwarfs accreting from non-degenerate companions show anomalous carbon and nitrogen abundances in the photospheres of their stellar components which have been postulated to be descendants of supersoft X-ray binaries. Therefore the carbon-to-nitrogen ratio can provide constraints upon their past evolution. We fit far ultraviolet spectroscopy of the cataclysmic variable HS0218+3229 taken with the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph using Markov Chain Monte Carlo. While some parameters depend upon the amount of reddening, the carbon-to-nitrogen ratio is about one tenth of the Solar value ( and for almost no reddening and E(B-V)=0.065, respectively, which are consistent within the uncertainties). We also provide estimates of the silicon and aluminum abundances, and upper limits for iron and oxygen. Using the measured parameters of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
