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2017MNRAS.467..597N - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 467, 597-618 (2017/May-1)

The remarkable outburst of the highly evolved post-period-minimum dwarf nova SSS J122221.7-311525.

NEUSTROEV V.V., MARSH T.R., ZHARIKOV S.V., KNIGGE C., KUULKERS E., OSBORNE J.P., PAGE K.L., STEEGHS D., SULEIMANOV V.F., TOVMASSIAN G., BREEDT E., FREBEL A., GARCIA-DIAZ M.T., HAMBSCH F.-J., JACOBSON H., PARSONS S.G., RYU T., SABIN L., SJOBERG G., MIROSHNICHENKO A.S., REICHART D.E., HAISLIP J.B., IVARSEN K.M., LACLUYZE A.P. and MOORE J.P.

Abstract (from CDS):

We report extensive 3-yr multiwavelength observations of the WZ Sge-type dwarf nova SSS J122221.7-311525 during its unusual double superoutburst, the following decline and in quiescence. The second segment of the superoutburst had a long duration of 33 d and a very gentle decline with a rate of 0.02 mag d–1, and it displayed an extended post-outburst decline lasting at least 500 d. Simultaneously with the start of the rapid fading from the superoutburst plateau, the system showed the appearance of a strong near-infrared excess resulting in very red colours, which reached extreme values (B - I ≃ 1.4) about 20 d later. The colours then became bluer again, but it took at least 250 d to acquire a stable level. Superhumps were clearly visible in the light curve from our very first time-resolved observations until at least 420 d after the rapid fading from the superoutburst. The spectroscopic and photometric data revealed an orbital period of 109.80 min and a fractional superhump period excess <=0.8 per cent, indicating a very low mass ratio q <= 0.045. With such a small mass ratio the donor mass should be below the hydrogen-burning minimum mass limit. The observed infrared flux in quiescence is indeed much lower than is expected from a cataclysmic variable with a near-main-sequence donor star. This strongly suggests a brown-dwarf-like nature for the donor and that SSS J122221.7-311525 has already evolved away from the period minimum towards longer periods, with the donor now extremely dim.

Abstract Copyright: © 2017 The Authors Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society

Journal keyword(s): binaries: close - stars: evolution - stars: individual: SSS J122221.7-311525 - novae, cataclysmic variables - novae, cataclysmic variables

Simbad objects: 24

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