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The Benefit of Archival Research in Investigating Dwarf Novae
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 April 2016
Extract
Dwarf novae and nova-like stars are a sub-group of the class of cataclysmic variables. Most of these stars show high and low brightness states (maxima or outbursts and minima or quiescent states, respectively). They all are short-period interacting binaries consisting of a white dwarf primary, a late-type Roche-lobe filling secondary, and an accretion disk around the white dwarf. For details on observations of cataclysmic variables and their theoretical explanations and modelling, the interested reader is referred to recent reviews.
The main problem when trying to understand these systems is the wealth of patterns presented by the whole group: no two objects are nearly identical and it is hard to say which the ‘typical’ features are. As a result of this, from an individual observation, or from observations of a few systems only, it is not possible to decide which of the observed features are characteristic of the entire class, and which are specific of individual members. The only way is to investigate many different members of the same class, arrange them according to their different physical parameters, and try to determine what the general characteristics are.
- Type
- Cataclysmic Variables: Eruptions and Flickering
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- Copyright © Springer-Verlag 1995