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Marsh et al. detected radio and optical pulsations from the binary system AR Scorpii (AR Sco). This system, with an orbital period of 3.56 h, is composed of a cool, low-mass star and a white dwarf with a spin period of 1.95 min. Optical observations by Buckley et al. showed that the polarimetric emission from the white dwarf is strongly linearly polarised ( up to $sim40%$) with periodically changing intensities. This periodic non-thermal emission is thought to be powered by the highly magnetised ($ 5 times 10^{8} $ G) white dwarf that is spinning down. The morphology of the polarisation signal, namely the position angle plotted against the phase angle, is similar to that seen in many radio pulsars. In this paper, we demonstrate that we can fit the traditional pulsar rotating vector model to the optical position angle. We used a Markov-chain-Monte-Carlo technique to find the best fit for the model yielding a magnetic inclination angle of $alpha = (86.6^{+3.0}_{-2.8})^{circ}$ and an observer angle of $zeta = (60.5^{+5.3}_{-6.1})^{circ}$. This modelling supports the scenario that the synchrotron emission originates above the polar caps of the white dwarf pulsar and that the latter is an orthogonal rotator.
We develop a model of the white dwarf (WD) - red dwarf (RD) binaries AR Sco and AE Aqr as systems in a transient propeller stage of highly asynchronous intermediate polars. The WDs are relatively weakly magnetized with magnetic field of $sim 10^6$ G.
Growing evidence suggests that Type Iax supernovae might be the result of thermonuclear deflagrations of Chandrasekhar-mass white dwarfs in binary systems. We carry out Monte Carlo radiative transfer simulations and predict spectropolarimetric featur
The variable star AR Sco was recently discovered to pulse in brightness every 1.97 min from ultraviolet wavelengths into the radio regime. The system is composed of a cool, low-mass star in a tight, 3.55 hr orbit with a more massive white dwarf. Here
We obtained high temporal resolution spectroscopy of the unusual binary system AR Sco covering nearly an orbit. The H$alpha$ emission shows a complex line structure similar to that seen in some polars during quiescence. Such emission is thought to be
The violent merger of two carbon-oxygen white dwarfs has been proposed as a viable progenitor for some Type Ia supernovae. However, it has been argued that the strong ejecta asymmetries produced by this model might be inconsistent with the low degree