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The B & V Light Curves for Recurrent Nova T CrB From 1842--2022, the Unique Pre- and Post-Eruption High-States, the Complex Period Changes, and the Upcoming Eruption in 2025.5$\pm$1.3
- Publication Year :
- 2023
-
Abstract
- T CrB is one of the most-famous and brightest novae known, and is a recurrent nova with prior eruptions in 1866 and 1946 that peak at $V$=2.0. I have constructed light curves spanning 1842--2022 with 213,730 magnitudes, where the $B$ and $V$ magnitudes are fully corrected to the Johnson system. These light curves first reveal a unique complex high-state (with 20$\times$ higher accretion rate than the normal low-state) stretching from -10 to +9 years after eruption, punctuated with a deep pre-eruption dip (apparently from dust formation in a slow mass ejection) and a unique enigmatic secondary eruption (with 10 per cent of the energy of the primary eruption), with the light curves identical for the 1866 and 1946 eruptions. Starting in 2015, T CrB entered the high-state, like in 1936, so a third eruption in upcoming years has been widely anticipated. With the pre-1946 light curve as a template, I predict a date of 2025.5$\pm$1.3 for the upcoming eruption, with the primary uncertainty arising from a possible lengthening of the pre-eruption high-state. I use the large-amplitude ellipsoidal modulation to track the orbital phase of the binary from 1867--2022. I measure that the orbital period increased abruptly by $+$0.185$\pm$0.056 days across the 1946 eruption, the 1947--2022 years had a steady period decrease of ($-$8.9$\pm$1.6)$\times$10$^{-6}$ days-per-day, and the 1867--1946 years had a steady period change consistent with zero, at ($+$1.75$\pm$4.5)$\times$10$^{-6}$ days-per-day. These large period changes cannot be explained by any published mechanism.<br />Comment: MNRAS in press
Details
- Database :
- arXiv
- Publication Type :
- Report
- Accession number :
- edsarx.2303.04933
- Document Type :
- Working Paper
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stad735