A Volume Limited Sample of Cataclysmic Variables from Gaia DR2: Space Density and Population Properties
Pala, AF; Gansicke, BT; Breedt, E; et al.Knigge, C; Hermes, JJ; Gentile Fusillo, NP; Hollands, MA; Naylor, T; Pelisoli, I; Schreiber, MR; Toonen, S; Aungwerojwit, A; Cukanovaite, E; Dennihy, E; Manser, CJ; Pretorius, ML; Scaringi, S; Toloza, O
Date: 2 April 2020
Journal
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP) / Royal Astronomical Society
Publisher DOI
Abstract
We present the first volume-limited sample of cataclysmic variables (CVs), selected
using the accurate parallaxes provided by the second data release (DR2) of the ESA
Gaia space mission. The sample is composed of 42 CVs within 150 pc, including two
new systems discovered using the Gaia data, and is (77 ± 10) per cent complete. We
use ...
We present the first volume-limited sample of cataclysmic variables (CVs), selected
using the accurate parallaxes provided by the second data release (DR2) of the ESA
Gaia space mission. The sample is composed of 42 CVs within 150 pc, including two
new systems discovered using the Gaia data, and is (77 ± 10) per cent complete. We
use this sample to study the intrinsic properties of the Galactic CV population. In
particular, the CV space density we derive, ρ = (4.8
+0.6
−0.8
) × 10−6 pc−3
, is lower than
predicted by most binary population synthesis studies. We also find a low fraction
of period bounce CVs, seven per cent, and an average white dwarf mass of hMWDi =
(0.83 ± 0.17) M . Both findings confirm previous results, ruling out the presence of
observational biases affecting these measurements, as has been suggested in the past.
The observed fraction of period bounce CVs falls well below theoretical predictions,
by at least a factor of five, and remains one of the open problems in the current
understanding of CV evolution. Conversely, the average white dwarf mass supports
the presence of additional mechanisms of angular momentum loss that have been
accounted for in the latest evolutionary models. The fraction of magnetic CVs in the
150 pc sample is remarkably high at 36 per cent. This is in striking contrast with the
absence of magnetic white dwarfs in the detached population of CV progenitors, and
underlines that the evolution of magnetic systems has to be included in the next
generation of population models.
Physics and Astronomy
Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy
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