2006
DOI: 10.5303/jkas.2006.39.2.041
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A Photometric Study of the Contact Binary Xz Leonis

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Cited by 9 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…An unequal quadrature light level, namely the O'Connell effect (O'Connell 1951), is found in many eclipsing binaries and explained by several physical mechanisms, such as the presence of additional orbital mass (also known as third light), a hot spot due to the impact from mass transfer between the components (Lee et al 2006), a cool spot that may be connected with magnetic activity with the same nature as solar magnetic spots (Mullan 1975) and the circulation effect (Zhou & Leung 1990).…”
Section: Star-spot Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An unequal quadrature light level, namely the O'Connell effect (O'Connell 1951), is found in many eclipsing binaries and explained by several physical mechanisms, such as the presence of additional orbital mass (also known as third light), a hot spot due to the impact from mass transfer between the components (Lee et al 2006), a cool spot that may be connected with magnetic activity with the same nature as solar magnetic spots (Mullan 1975) and the circulation effect (Zhou & Leung 1990).…”
Section: Star-spot Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The O'Connell effect (O'Connell 1951) that explains the different heights of the maxima, is visible; a cool spot on the secondary component of AF LMi and a cool spot on the primary component of CzeV188 (inverse O'Connell effect) were added to obtain the best fit to the light curves. The cool spot, in contrast to the hot spot, is connected with magnetic activity of the same nature as solar magnetic spots (Mullan 1975); the hot spot is generally due to the impact of the mass transferred between the components (Lee et al 2006). CzeV188, with its short orbital period (<0.3 days) and its spectral type K, suggests that it is near the shortest period limit.…”
Section: Af Lmi and Czev188mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…for SW Lyn;Lee et al 2006 for XZ Leo; Lee et al 2014 for V407 Peg; Tian & Zhu 2019 for V723 Per), or time-varying spot activity on the components (e.g. Kang et al 2002 for TY UMa; Qian & Yang 2005 for FG Hya).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%