1. X-RAY FLASHES IN RECURRENT NOVAE: M31N 2008-12a AND THE IMPLICATIONS OF THE SWIFT NONDETECTION.
- Author
-
Mariko Kato, Hideyuki Saio, Martin Henze, Jan-Uwe Ness, Julian P. Osborne, Kim L. Page, Matthew J. Darnley, Michael F. Bode, Allen W. Shafter, Margarita Hernanz, Neil Gehrels, Jamie Kennea, and Izumi Hachisu
- Subjects
X-ray astronomy ,WHITE dwarf stars ,NOVAE (Astronomy) ,SPACE astronomy ,ASTRONOMY - Abstract
Models of nova outbursts suggest that an X-ray flash should occur just after hydrogen ignition. However, this X-ray flash has never been observationally confirmed. We present four theoretical light curves of the X-ray flash for two very massive white dwarfs (WDs) of 1.380 and 1.385 and for two recurrence periods of 0.5 and 1 yr. The duration of the X-ray flash is shorter for a more massive WD and for a longer recurrence period. The shortest duration of 14 hr (0.6 days) among the four cases is obtained for the WD with a 1 yr recurrence period. In general, a nova explosion is relatively weak for a very short recurrence period, which results in a rather slow evolution toward the optical peak. This slow timescale and the predictability of very short recurrence period novae give us a chance to observe X-ray flashes of recurrent novae. In this context, we report the first attempt, using the Swift observatory, to detect an X-ray flash of the recurrent nova M31N 2008-12a (0.5 or 1 yr recurrence period), which resulted in the nondetection of X-ray emission during the period of 8 days before the optical detection. We discuss the impact of these observations on nova outburst theory. The X-ray flash is one of the last frontiers of nova studies, and its detection is essential for understanding the pre-optical-maximum phase. We encourage further observations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF