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I review what we know about the donor stars in cataclysmic variables (CVs), focusing particularly on the close link between these binary components and the overall secular evolution of CVs. I begin with a brief overview of the standard model of CV evolution and explain why the key observables this model is designed to explain - the period gap and the period minimum -- are intimately connected to the properties of the secondary stars in these systems. CV donors are expected to be slightly inflated relative to isolated, equal-mass main-sequence (MS) stars, and this donor bloating has now been confirmed observationally. The empirical donor mass-radius relationship also shows a discontinuity at M_2 = 0.2 M_sun which neatly separates long- and short-period CVs. This is strong confirmation of the basic disrupted magnetic braking scenario for CV evolution. The empirical M_2-R_2 relation can be combined with stellar models to construct a complete, semi-empirical donor sequence for CVs. This sequence provides all physical and photometric properties of normal CV secondaries along the standard CV evolution track. The observed donor properties can also be used to reconstruct the complete evolution track followed by CVs, i.e. the mass-transfer rate and angular-momentum-loss rate as a function of orbital period. Such a reconstruction suggests that angular momentum loss rates below the period gap are too high to be driven solely by gravitational radiation.
The last few years have seen tremendous progress in our understanding of cataclysmic variable stars. As a result, we are finally developing a much clearer picture of their evolution as binary systems, the physics of the accretion processes powering t
Every massive globular cluster (GC) is expected to harbour a significant population of cataclysmic variables (CVs). In this review, I first explain why GC CVs matter astrophysically, how many and what types are theoretically predicted to exist and wh
We explore the observational appearance of the merger of a low-mass star with a white dwarf (WD) binary companion. We are motivated by Schreiber et al. (2016), who found that multiple tensions between the observed properties of cataclysmic variables
I review our current understanding of the evolution of cataclysmic variables (CVs). I first provide a brief introductory CV primer, in which I describe the physical structure of CVs, as well as their astrophysical significance. The main part of the r