Over a decade ago, three cataclysmic variables (CVs; SW Sex,
DW UMa, and V1315 Aql) were proposed as the founding members
of a new CV subclass, the SW Sex stars (see
1986ApJ...302..388H,
1990ApJ...361..235S, and
1991AJ....102..272T).
Additional CVs matching the characteristics of the first
three were subsequently identified. The original defining
properties of the SW Sex stars are as follows (also see
1991AJ....102..272T,
1998PhDT........10H – also available
here - and the review in
1995cvs..book.....W):
- They are novalike CVs. Unlike the
more well-known dwarf nova class of CV, members of the
novalike class do not undergo quasiperiodic outbursts.
Novalikes are instead characterized by an approximately
steady, high rate of mass transfer (and correspondingly
prominent accretion disk) that quenches the disk instability
mechanism responsible for dwarf nova outbursts.
- Their optical light curves show deep
eclipses of the WD+disk by the secondary star, requiring
the system inclination to be high
(i > 70°–80°).
- They have orbital periods of
3–4 hr, just above the 2–3 hr period gap
(in which few non-magnetic CVs are found) that is thought
to arise during the secular evolution of CVs due to a
change in angular momentum loss mechanism, likely triggered
by mass-loss-induced evolution of the donor star. This
range of orbital periods is also associated with the
largest range and highest extreme of predicted rates of
mass transfer in CVs, above expectations from the standard
theory for the secular evolution of CVs.
- They display high levels of spectral
excitation, including He II λ4686 emission
that is often comparable in strength to Hβ.
- Their spectra exhibit single-peaked
emission lines rather than the double-peaked lines expected
from near-edge-on disks.
- The Balmer and He I emission
lines are only shallowly (or not at all) eclipsed compared
to the continuum (implying emission originating above the
orbital plane).
- The zero-crossings of their emission
line radial velocities exhibit pronounced phase offsets
relative to their eclipse ephemerides (implying a
non-uniform distribution of emitting regions in the disk).
- Transient absorption features appear
in their Balmer and He I emission line cores, typically
around photometric phase φ ≈ 0.5 (i.e.,
the superior conjunction of the secondary star, opposite the
eclipse).
The number of confirmed and probable SW Sex stars has now
swelled (e.g., see
The Big List of SW Sextantis Stars).
In part, this is due to accepting that “SW Sexiness”
does not have a rigid definition linked to a specific CV
morphology. Rather, the original SW Sex stars represent
extreme cases of a pathology that is present at some level
in many high mass transfer rate CVs. Consequently, SW Sex
behavior has been recognized in CVs that do not eclipse
(e.g., V442 Ophiuchi –
2000ApJ...537..936H),
have orbital periods outside the range 3–4 hr
(e.g., BT Monocerotis –
1998MNRAS.296..465S),
or in which the transient absorption occurs outside the
orbital phase range φ ≈ 0.4–0.6
(e.g., UU Aquarii –
1998MNRAS.294..689H).