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A Diagnostic for Models of U Geminorum

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 April 2016

B. Paczyński
Affiliation:
Copernicus Astronomical Center, Warsaw, Poland
A. Schwarzenberg-Czerny
Affiliation:
Copernicus Astronomical Center, Warsaw, Poland
Charles Alcock
Affiliation:
Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, NJ 08540

Extract

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Models of U Geminorum fall into two basic types. Both involve a Roche-lobe filling main sequence dwarf orbiting a white dwarf, around which there is an accretion disk. In one type of model there is continuous mass accretion from the inner Lagrange point through the disk to the white dwarf at all times, and the outburst is produced by varying the mass transfer across the inner Lagrange point (Bath et al., 1974). In the second type of model, there is not any accretion from the outer edge of the disk to the white dwarf between outbursts, and matter streaming from the inner Lagrange point accumulates in a torus (Osaki 1974, Paczyński 1978). The outburst is a result of an instability in the disk that suddenly increases the viscosity. A simple diagnostic test of the former type of model is to model the luminosity produced from the accretion disk at minimum light. Following Smak (1976) we adopt a white dwarf mass of 0.9 M, inner and outer radii of the disk of 6.1 × 108 cm and 3.6 × 1010 cm, inclination 67°, and velocity of the stream hitting the disk of 400 km sec-1. Following Wade (1979) we adopt a distance modulus of 4m.4 and a maximum brightness in the visual band of 14m.76. Averaging this radiation over angles and using the velocity information gives a lower limit to the mass transfer rate of 10–10 M yr-1. Assuming that the disk is optically thick, and taking into account limb darkening in an approximate fashion, yields an expected brightness in the visual band Vdisk ≤ 12m.6. This is two magnitudes too bright. A crude analysis of optically thin disks indicates that stable configurations only exist for disk temperatures close to 1.5×10 °K. This temperature is too low for the accretion rate inferred here, if the disk is optically thin. For this reason the disk must be optically thick. Since the visual magnitude of the disk is too high if it is accreting, we conclude that continuous accretion does not occur at minimum light and that matter accumulates in a torus.

Type
Abstracts of Workshop Papers on Dwarf Novae
Copyright
Copyright © The University of Rochester 1979

References

Bath, G. T., Evans, W. D., Papaloizou, J. and Pringle, J. E. 1974, M.N.R.A.S. 169, 447.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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Paczyński, B. 1978, in “Nonstationary Evolution of Close Binaries” ed. żytkow, A. N. (PWW: Warsaw) p. 89.Google Scholar
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