Genuine standstill in the AM CVn star CR Boo
Taichi Kato (Kyoto U), Yutaka Maeda, Masayuki Moriyama (VSOLJ)

TL;DR
This paper reports the first confirmed standstill in the AM CVn star CR Boo, suggesting it behaves like a helium analog of Z Cam stars and challenging existing theories of helium accretion disks.
Contribution
It provides the first observational evidence of a bona fide standstill in CR Boo, expanding the understanding of AM CVn star behaviors and classifications.
Findings
Identified a 60-day standstill in CR Boo in 2022
Standstill was not preceded by a superoutburst
Post-standstill brightness similar to post-superoutburst states
Abstract
CR Boo is one of the brightest and most famous AM CVn stars showing dwarf nova-type outbursts. Previous studies showed different modes of outbursts in this object ranging from the one equivalent to a hydrogen-rich ER UMa star or WZ Sge star to a low-amplitude oscillating state. We for the first time identified a bona fide standstill in this object in 2022 and we consider that CR Boo is a helium analog of Z Cam stars in addition to its SU UMa/ER UMa-type classification. The standstill lasted for ~60 d with variations typically less than 0.2 mag and ended with fading. This standstill was not preceded by a superoutburst and was different from a post-superoutburst phenomenon. The brightness after the standstill was similar to those after superoutbursts and the standstill appears to have acted like a superoutburst in effectively accreting the disk mass. The existence of a standstill in an AM…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · High-pressure geophysics and materials · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
