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Swift detection of the super-swift switch-on of the super-soft phase in nova V745 Sco (2014)

Authors :
Page, K. L.
Osborne, J. P.
Kuin, N. P. M.
Henze, M.
Walter, F. M.
Beardmore, A. P.
Bode, M. F.
Darnley, M. J.
Delgado, L.
Drake, J. J.
Hernanz, M.
Mukai, K.
Nelson, T.
Ness, J. -U.
Schwarz, G. J.
Shore, S. N.
Starrfield, S.
Woodward, C. E.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

V745 Sco is a recurrent nova, with the most recent eruption occurring in February 2014. V745 Sco was first observed by Swift a mere 3.7 hr after the announcement of the optical discovery, with the super-soft X-ray emission being detected around four days later and lasting for only ~two days, making it both the fastest follow-up of a nova by Swift and the earliest switch-on of super-soft emission yet detected. Such an early switch-on time suggests a combination of a very high velocity outflow and low ejected mass and, together with the high effective temperature reached by the super-soft emission, a high mass white dwarf (>1.3 M_sun). The X-ray spectral evolution was followed from an early epoch where shocked emission was evident, through the entirety of the super-soft phase, showing evolving column density, emission lines, absorption edges and thermal continuum temperature. UV grism data were also obtained throughout the super-soft interval, with the spectra showing mainly emission lines from lower ionization transitions and the Balmer continuum in emission. V745 Sco is compared with both V2491 Cyg (another nova with a very short super-soft phase) and M31N 2008-12a (the most rapidly recurring nova yet discovered). The longer recurrence time compared to M31N 2008-12a could be due to a lower mass accretion rate, although inclination of the system may also play a part. Nova V745 Sco (2014) revealed the fastest evolving super-soft source phase yet discovered, providing a detailed and informative dataset for study.<br />Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures (4 in colour), accepted for publication in MNRAS

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1509.04004
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stv2144