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Simulations of superhumps and superoutbursts

We numerically study the tidal instability of accretion discs in close binary systems using a two-dimensional SPH code. We find that the precession rate of tidally unstable, eccentric discs does not only depend upon the binary mass ratio q. Although the (prograde) disc precession rate increases with...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 1998-06, Vol.297 (1), p.323-333
Main Author: Murray, J. R.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:We numerically study the tidal instability of accretion discs in close binary systems using a two-dimensional SPH code. We find that the precession rate of tidally unstable, eccentric discs does not only depend upon the binary mass ratio q. Although the (prograde) disc precession rate increases with the strength of the tidal potential, we find that increasing the shear viscosity ν also has a significant prograde effect. Increasing the disc temperature has a retrograde impact upon the precession rate. We find that motion relative to the binary potential results in superhump-like, periodic luminosity variations in the outer reaches of an eccentric disc. The nature and location of the luminosity modulation are functions of ν. Light curves most similar to observations are obtained for ν values appropriate for a dwarf nova in outburst. We investigate the thermal–tidal instability model for superoutburst. A dwarf nova outburst is simulated by instantaneously increasing ν, which causes a rapid radial expansion of the disc. Should the disc encounter the 3: 1 eccentric inner Lindblad resonance and become tidally unstable, then tidal torques become much more efficient at removing angular momentum from the disc. The disc then shrinks and Md increases. The resulting increase in disc luminosity is found to be consistent with the excess luminosity of a superoutburst.
ISSN:0035-8711
1365-2966
DOI:10.1046/j.1365-8711.1998.01504.x