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TESS photometry of the nova eruption in V606 Vul: asymmetric photosphere and multiple ejections?

Authors :
Sokolovsky, Kirill V.
Aydi, Elias
Malanchev, Konstantin
Burke, Colin J.
Mukai, Koji
Sokoloski, J. L.
Metzger, Brian D.
Atapin, Kirill E.
Belinski, Aleksandre A.
Chen, Yu-Ching
Chomiuk, Laura
Dubovsky, Pavol A.
Faucher-Giguere, Claude-Andre
Hounsell, Rebekah A.
Ikonnikova, Natalia P.
Lander, Vsevolod Yu.
Li, Junyao
Linford, Justin D.
Mioduszewski, Amy J.
Molina, Isabella
Munari, Ulisse
Potanin, Sergey A.
Quimby, Robert M.
Rupen, Michael P.
Scaringi, Simone
Shatsky, Nicolai I.
Shen, Yue
Steinberg, Elad
Stone, Zachary
Tatarnikov, Andrey M.
Vurm, Indrek
Williams, Montana N.
Azcona, Antonio Agudo
Boyd, David
Bean, Stewart
Braunwarth, Horst
Blackwell, John
Bolzoni, Simone
Casas, Ricard
Fernandez, David Cejudo
Dubois, Franky
Foster, James
Farfan, Rafael
Galdies, Charles
Hodge, John
Gallego, Jose Prieto
Lane, David J.
Larsson, Magnus
Lindner, Peter
Logie, Ludwig
Mantero, Andrea
Aimar, Mario Morales
Menzies, Kenneth
Nakonechny, Keith
Philpot, Jerry
Filho, Antonio Padilla
Ramey, Brian
Rau, Steve
Reina, Esteban
Romanov, Filipp D.
Ruocco, Nello
Shears, Jeremy
Serreau, Marc
Schmidt, Richard
Solomonov, Yuri
Tracy, Bob
Tulloch, Gord
Tomlin, Ray
Tordai, Tamas
Vanaverbeke, Siegfried
Wenzel, Klaus
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Lightcurves of many classical novae deviate from the canonical "fast rise - smooth decline" pattern and display complex variability behavior. We present the first TESS-space-photometry-based investigation of this phenomenon. We use TESS Sector 41 full-frame images to extract a lightcurve of the slow Galactic nova V606 Vul that erupted nine days prior to the start of the TESS observations. The lightcurve covers the first of two major peaks of V606 Vul that was reached 19 days after the start of the eruption. The nova reached its brightest visual magnitude V=9.9 in its second peak 64 days after the eruption onset, following the completion of Sector 41 observations. To increase the confidence level of the extracted lightcurve, we performed the analysis using four different codes implementing the aperture photometry (Lightkurve, VaST) and image subtraction (TESSreduce, tequila_shots) and find good agreement between them. We performed ground-based photometric and spectroscopic monitoring to complement the TESS data. The TESS lightcurve reveals two features: periodic variations (0.12771d, 0.01mag average peak-to-peak amplitude) that disappeared when the source was within 1mag of peak optical brightness and a series of isolated mini-flares (with peak-to-peak amplitudes of up to 0.5mag) appearing at seemingly random times. We interpret the periodic variations as the result of azimuthal asymmetry of the photosphere engulfing the nova-hosting binary that was distorted by and rotating with the binary. Whereas we use spectra to associate the two major peaks in the nova lightcurve with distinct episodes of mass ejection, the origin of mini-flares remains elusive.<br />Comment: 31 pages, 10 figures, submitted to ApJ; comments welcome

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2311.04903
Document Type :
Working Paper