4.7 Article

Optical detection of the rapidly spinning white dwarf in V1460 Her

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 507, Issue 4, Pages 6132-6139

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stab2511

Keywords

binaries: close; binaries: eclipsing; binaries: general; stars: cataclysmic variables

Funding

  1. UK's Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC) [ST/T000406/1]
  2. Leverhulme Trust
  3. Thailand Science Research and Innovation (TSRI) [FRB640025, R2564B006]
  4. STFC [ST/V000853/1]
  5. STFC Ernest Rutherford Fellowship

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Monitoring the spin history of accreting magnetic white dwarfs provides valuable insights into the interplay between spin-up and spin-down torques in binary systems. Through optical photometry and precise ephemeris derivation, this study tracked the 39-s white dwarf spin pulses in the cataclysmic variable V1460 Her, revealing a stable spin rate over a baseline of over 4 years. These results offer constraints for evolutionary models and reveal the potential for using similar techniques in other cataclysmic variable systems with rapidly rotating white dwarfs.
Accreting magnetic white dwarfs offer an opportunity to understand the interplay between spin-up and spin-down torques in binary systems. Monitoring of the white dwarf spin may reveal whether the white dwarf spin is currently in a state of near-equilibrium, or of unidirectional evolution towards longer or shorter periods, reflecting the recent history of the system and providing constraints for evolutionary models. This makes the monitoring of the spin history of magnetic white dwarfs of high interest. In this paper, we report the results of a campaign of follow-up optical photometry to detect and track the 39-s white dwarf spin pulses recently discovered in Hubble Space Telescope data of the cataclysmic variable V1460 Her. We find the spin pulsations to be present in the g-band photometry at a typical amplitude of 0.4 per cent. Under favourable observing conditions, the spin signal is detectable using 2-m class telescopes. We measured pulse-arrival times for all our observations, which allowed us to derive a precise ephemeris for the white dwarf spin. We have also derived an orbital modulation correction that can be applied to the measurements. With our limited baseline of just over 4 yr, we detect no evidence yet for spin-up or spin-down of the white dwarf, obtaining a lower limit of vertical bar P/(P)over dot vertical bar > 4 x 10(7) yr, which is already four to eight times longer than the time-scales measured in two other cataclysmic variable systems containing rapidly rotating white dwarfs, AE Aqr and AR Sco.

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