BIB-VERSION:: AST-PP-v1.0
ID:: epreps.stsci//prep1204
ENTRY:: March 9, 1998
TITLE:: HST/FOS Eclipse Observations of the Nova-Like Cataclysmic Variable UX Ursae Majoris
SUBTITLE::
AUTHOR:: Knigge, Christian (1)
AUTHOR:: Long, Knox S. (1)
AUTHOR:: Wade, Richard A. (2)
AUTHOR:: Baptista, Raymundo (3)
AUTHOR:: Horne, Keith (4)
AUTHOR:: Hubeny, Ivan (5)
AUTHOR:: Rutten, René G.M. (6)
AFFIL:: (1) Space Telescope Science Institute 3700 San Martin Drive Baltimore, MD 21218 USA
AFFIL:: (2) The Pennsylvania State University Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics, 525 Davey Laboratory University Park, PA 16802
AFFIL:: (3) Departamento de Fisica, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Campus Universitario, Trindade, 88040 Florianopolis, Brasil
AFFIL:: (4) Department of Physics and Astronomy, The University of St. Andrews, North Haugh, St. Andrews, Fife, KY16 9SS, UK
AFFIL:: (5) NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD 20771
AFFIL:: (6) Isaac Newton Group, Apartado de correos 321, E-38780 Santa Cruz de La Palma, Spain
DATE:: December 1997
JOURNAL:: To appear in: The Astrophysical Journal
SUBMITTED:: 6 August 1997
ACCEPTED:: 25 November 1997
OTHER_ACCESS::
COPYRIGHT:: Copyright 1997 The Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
LANGUAGE:: English
ABSTRACT::
We present and analyze Hubble Space Telescope Faint observations
of the eclipsing nova-like cataclysmic variable UX UMa
obtained with the Faint Object Spectrograph. Two eclipses each
were observed with the G160L grating (covering the ultraviolet
waveband) in August of 1994 and with the PRISM (covering the
near-ultraviolet to near-infrared) in November of the same year. The
system was ~50% brighter in November than in August,
which, if due to a change in the accretion rate, indicates a fairly
substantial increase in M·acc by
50%.
The eclipse light curves are qualitatively consistent with the gradual occultation of an accretion disk with a radially decreasing temperature distribution. The light curves also exhibit asymmetries about mid-eclipse that are likely due to a bright spot at the disk edge. Bright spot spectra have been constructed by differencing the mean spectra observed at pre- and post-eclipse orbital phases. These difference spectra contain ultraviolet absorption lines and show the Balmer jump in emission. This suggests that part of the bright spot may be optically thin in the continuum and vertically extended enough to veil the inner disk and/or the outflow from UX UMa in some spectral lines.
Model disk spectra constructed as ensembles of stellar atmospheres provide poor descriptions of the observed post-eclipse spectra, despite the fact that UX UMa's light should be dominated by the disk at this time. Suitably scaled single temperature model stellar atmospheres with Teff ~ 12,500-14,500 K actually provide a better match to both the ultraviolet and optical post-eclipse spectra. Evidently, great care must be taken in attempts to derive accretion rates from comparisons of disk models to observations.
One way to reconcile disk models with the observed post-eclipse spectra is to postulate the presence of a significant amount of optically thin material in the system. Such an optically thin component might be associated with the transition region ("chromosphere") between the disk photosphere and the fast wind from the system, whose presence has been suggested by Knigge & Drew (1997). In any event, the wind/chromosphere is likely to be the region in which many, if not most, of the UV lines are formed. This is clear from the plethora of emission lines that appear in the mid-eclipse spectra, some of which appear as absorption features in spectra taken at out-of-eclipse orbital phases.
END:: epreps.stsci//prep1204