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We present a study of the eclipses in the accreting white dwarf EX Dra during TESS Cycles 14 and 15. During both of the two outbursts present in this dataset, the eclipses undergo a hysteretic loop in eclipse-depth/out-of-eclipse-flux space. In each case, the direction in which the loops are executed strongly suggests an outburst which is triggered near the inner edge of the accretion disk and propagates outwards. This in turn suggests that the outbursts in EX Dra are Inside Out outbursts; events predicted by previous hydrodynamic studies of dwarf nova accretion disks and confirmed spectroscopically in a number of other accreting white dwarf systems. We therefore propose that the direction of the loop executed in eclipse-depth/out-of-eclipse flux space be used as a test to phenomenologically distinguish between inside out and outside in outbursts in other eclipsing dwarf novae; a reliable and purely photometric test to differentiate between these phenomena.
The distribution of galaxies on the mass-size plane as a function of redshift or environment is a powerful test for galaxy formation models. Here we use integral-field stellar kinematics to interpret the variation of the mass-size distribution in two
We use the best available X-ray data from the intermediate polar EX Hydrae to study the cooling-flow model often applied to interpret the X-ray spectra of these accreting magnetic white dwarf binaries. First, we resolve a long-standing discrepancy be
Using TESS we are doing a systematic study of outbursting AM~CVn systems to place some limits on the current outbursts models. We present the TESS light curve (LC) for 9 AM~CVns showing both superoutbursts (SO) and normal outbursts (NO). The continuo
Planet migration in protoplanetary discs plays an important role in the longer term evolution of planetary systems, yet we currently have no direct observational test to determine if a planet is migrating in its gaseous disc. We explore the formation
The activity of massive stars approaching core-collapse can strongly affect the appearance of the star and its subsequent supernova. Late-phase convective nuclear burning generates waves that propagate toward the stellar surface, heating the envelope