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 V2051 Oph - A Dwarf Nova with a CB Planet?

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Sirius_Alpha
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V2051 Oph - A Dwarf Nova with a CB Planet? Empty
PostSubject: V2051 Oph - A Dwarf Nova with a CB Planet?   V2051 Oph - A Dwarf Nova with a CB Planet? Empty11th September 2016, 7:00 pm

LONG-TERM DECREASE AND CYCLIC VARIATION IN THE ORBITAL PERIOD OF THE ECLIPSING DWARF NOVA V2051 OPH
http://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/0067-0049/221/1/17/meta;jsessionid=08946997EDDC6082CFE742AF13D6237B.c5.iopscience.cld.iop.org

Quote :
V2051 Oph is a deeply eclipsing dwarf nova with an orbital period below the period gap of cataclysmic variables (CVs). It has been photometrically monitored since 2008 June and 24 mid-eclipse times of the white dwarf have been obtained. The changes in the orbital period are investigated using all of the available mid-eclipse times. A continuous period decrease with a rate of $\dot{P}=-5.93\times {10}^{-10}\;\mathrm{days}\;{\mathrm{yr}}^{-1}$ was discovered to be superimposed on a periodic variation with a small amplitude of 0fd000329 and a period of 21.64 years. The standard theory predicted that the evolution of CVs below the period gap is driven by gravitational radiation. However, angular momentum loss (AML) via gravitational radiation is insufficient to explain this decrease, and additional AML via magnetic braking that is about five times the gravitational radiation rate is required. This is consistent with the theoretical requirement indicating that magnetic braking of the fully convective star is not completely stopped. The cyclic oscillation was interpreted as the variation of the arriving eclipse time via the presence of a third body because the required energy for the Applegate mechanism is much larger than that radiated from the secondary in 10 years. Its mass is derived as ${M}_{3}\mathrm{sin}{i}^{\prime }=7.3(\pm 0.7)$ Jupiter mass. For orbital inclinations ${i}^{\prime }\geqslant 30\buildrel{\circ}\over{.} 3,$ it would be a planetary object. The giant circumbinary planet is orbiting around V2051 Oph at an orbital separation of about 9.0 astronomical units (AU) in an eccentric orbit (e' = 0.37). These conclusions support the ideas that some planets could survive stellar late evolution and that dwarf novae are also planetary hosting stars.

Exoplanet.eu link.
http://exoplanet.eu/catalog/v2051_oph_b/

Given the history we've had with detecting circumbinary planets through transit timing variations, non-detections of companions that such methods have predicted to exist (i.e., V471 Tau), and the weirdness of the system, I think it's worth having a little bit of skepticism.

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