
doi: 10.1086/113143
A sample of dwarf novae and other cataclysmic variable stars were observed using the multichannel spectrophotometer on the 5-m Hale reflector. A preliminary qualitative description of the continuum distributions is given and a discussion of the Balmer emission-line fluxes is made. For the spectral energy distributions, the logarithm of the monochromatic flux density is plotted against the inverse of the wavelength. It is concluded that the presence or absence of evident flux from a late-type stellar component is consistent with the standard picture which has been developed for the structure of cataclysmic variable stars. The presence of the Balmer jump in emission or absorption can be understood in terms of the relative importance of an optically thick accreting disk characteristic of nova-like variables and dwarf novae in outburst and an optically thin outer accreting disk characteristic of quiescent dwarf novae.
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