Discovery of a Short-Period and Unusually Helium-Deficient Dwarf Nova KSP-OT-201701a by the KMTNet Supernova Program

Abstract

We present the first ever discovery of a short-period and unusually helium-deficient dwarf nova KSP-OT-201701a by the Korea Microlensing Telescope Network Supernova Program. The source shows three superoutbursts, each led by a precursor outburst, and several normal outbursts in BVI during the span of ~2.6 years with supercycle and normal cycle lengths of about 360 and 76 days, respectively. Spectroscopic observations near the end of a superoutburst reveal the presence of strong double-peaked HI emission lines together with weak HeI emission lines. The helium-to-hydrogen intensity ratios measured by HeIλ5876 and Hα lines are 0.10 0.01 at a quiescent phase and 0.26 0.04 at an outburst phase, similar to the ratios found in long-period dwarf novae while significantly lower than those in helium cataclysmic variables (He CVs). Its orbital period of 51.91 2.50 minutes, which is estimated based on time series spectroscopy, is a bit shorter than the superhump period of 56.52 0.19 minutes, as expected from the gravitational interaction between the eccentric disk and the secondary star. We measure its mass ratio to be 0.37+0.32-0.21 using the superhump period excess of 0.089 0.053. The short orbital period, which is under the period minimum, the unusual helium deficiency, and the large mass ratio suggest that KSP-OT-201701a is a transition object evolving to a He CV from a long-period dwarf nova with an evolved secondary star.

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