CM Mic and other ER UMa stars showing standstills [SSA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2304.04973


We analyzed All-Sky Automated Survey for Supernovae (ASAS-SN), Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS) and Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) observations of CM Mic and found that this object belongs to a small group of ER UMa stars showing standstills. In addition to typical ER UMa-type cycles, the object showed standstills between 2017 and 2019 July, and in 2022. The supercycles varied between 49 and 83 d. In 2015, the object showed outbursts with a cycle length of ~35 d. An analysis of TESS observations during the 2020 July outburst detected superhumps with a mean period of 0.080251(6) d (value after the full development of superhumps). We also studied other ER UMa stars showing standstills mainly using Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF) data. DDE 48, MGAB-V728 and ZTF18abmpkbj mostly showed ER UMa-type supercycles but showed one or two standstills. MGAB-V3488 was mostly in ER UMa states with short (~25 d) supercycles in 2020-2022 similar to RZ LMi. This object also showed long standstills. PS1-3PI J181732.65+101954.6 showed ER UMa-type supercycles up to 2020 May and entered a long standstill. ZTF18abncpgs showed standstills most of the time, but also showed ER UMa-type supercycles occasionally between standstills. ZTF19aarsljl is a likely member of this group. MGAB-V284 showed a pattern similar to ER UMa stars showing standstills but with a longer time-scale of normal outbursts. This object seems to be an ER UMa star with standstills above the period gap. None of the objects we studied showed a superoutburst arising from a long standstill, as recorded in NY Ser in 2018, although the 2019 June-July superoutburst of PS1-3PI J181732.65+101954.6 might have been an exception.

Read this paper on arXiv…

T. Kato and N. Kojiguchi
Wed, 12 Apr 23
40/45

Comments: 33 pages, 20 figures, VSOLJ Variable Star Bulletin No. 112