Two decades of optical timing of the shortest-period binary star system HM Cancri
James Munday, T. R. Marsh, Mark Hollands, Ingrid Pelisoli, Danny, Steeghs, Pasi Hakala, Elm\'e Breedt, Alex Brown, V. S. Dhillon, Martin J., Dyer, Matthew Green, Paul Kerry, S.P. Littlefair, Steven G. Parsons, Dave, Sahman, Sorawit Somjit, Boonchoo Sukaum, James Wild

TL;DR
Over two decades of optical observations reveal that HM Cancri's orbital frequency is increasing due to mass transfer, counteracting gravitational wave decay, with models suggesting a hydrogen-rich white dwarf donor and a high-mass accretor.
Contribution
This study provides the first long-term optical timing analysis of HM Cancri, quantifies its orbital evolution, and models its donor and accretor masses using HST spectra and stellar evolution simulations.
Findings
Orbital frequency derivative is positive, but its second derivative is negative.
HM Cancri will reverse its orbital evolution in approximately 2100 years.
Spectroscopic evidence indicates a hydrogen-rich donor star.
Abstract
The shortest-period binary star system known to date, RX J0806.3+1527 (HM Cancri), has now been observed in the optical for more than two decades. Although it is thought to be a double degenerate binary undergoing mass transfer, an early surprise was that its orbital frequency, , is currently increasing as the result of gravitational wave radiation. This is unusual since it was expected that the mass donor was degenerate and would expand on mass loss, leading to a decreasing . We exploit two decades of high-speed photometry to precisely quantify the trajectory of HM Cancri, allowing us to find that is negative, where Hz s. Coupled with our positive frequency derivative, we show that mass transfer is counteracting gravitational-wave dominated orbital decay and that HM Cancri will turn around within yrs…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
