Bibcode
Casares, J.; Martinez-Pais, I. G.; Marsh, T. R.; Charles, P. A.; Lazaro, C.
Referencia bibliográfica
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 278, Issue 1, pp. 219-235.
Fecha de publicación:
1
1996
Número de citas
59
Número de citas referidas
51
Descripción
We present optical photometry and spectroscopy of the nova-like variable
V795 Her. The emission lines exhibit an extremely complex structure
consisting of several time-variable emission and absorption components.
We confirm the spectroscopic modulation of 0.1082d which we attribute to
the orbital period of the system. The equivalent widths (EWs) of all the
emission lines are strongly modulated on this period, showing a
pronounced minimum around phase 0.5. We associate this minimum with the
transit of an absorption feature which drives dramatic line changes,
seen as transient double peaks and PCygni type profiles. The absorption
depth grows with the excitation level in Balmer and HeI lines, but both
the HeII lambda4686 and the metallic lines (e.g. CII lambda4267 and the
Bowen blend) are entirely in emission. The centroid of the Hα
emission (which is contaminated very little by the absorption feature)
is delayed by 83 deg with respect to the high-excitation lines. We
assume that the latter trace the orbital motion of the primary, enabling
us to define an absolute zero-phase. High-velocity S-waves are clearly
observed in all Balmer lines, with amplitudes of about 1750 km s^-1 and
maximum redshift at about phase 0. However, our high-resolution spectra
suggest that these can be separated into two phased components, with
gamma-velocities of ~+/-750 km s^-1 and K~1000 km s^-1, probably formed
in accretion columns on the white dwarf. In addition, the HI cores
exhibit the presence of low-velocity (K=268 km s^-1) S-waves, roughly
phased with their high-amplitude partners. On the other hand, our R-band
photometry is dominated by flickering with no evidence for modulation
with the orbital period nor the previously reported 0.1165-d
periodicity. Based on the spectral properties, we propose that V795 Her
is a new SW Sex star, observed at intermediate inclination. The complex
behaviour of V795 Her can be qualitatively explained invoking an
intermediate polar scenario with a synchronously rotating white dwarf.