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Supersoft X-Ray Phases of Recurrent Novae as an Indicator of their White Dwarf Masses

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 Added by Izumi Hachisu
 Publication date 2020
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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We have examined the optical/X-ray light curves of seven well-observed recurrent novae, V745 Sco, M31N 2008-12a, LMC N 1968, U Sco, RS Oph, LMC N 2009a, T Pyx, and one recurrent nova candidate LMC N 2012a. Six novae out of the eight show a simple relation that the duration of supersoft X-ray source (SSS) phase is 0.70 times the total duration of the outburst ($=$ X-ray turnoff time), i.e., $t_{rm SSS}=0.70 t_{rm off}$, the total duration of which ranges from 10 days to 260 days. These six recurrent novae show a broad rectangular X-ray light curve shape, first half a period of which is highly variable in the X-ray count rate. The SSS phase corresponds also to an optical plateau phase that indicates a large accretion disk irradiated by a hydrogen-burning WD. The other two recurrent novae, T Pyx and V745 Sco, show a narrow triangular shape of X-ray light curve without an optical plateau phase. Their relations between $t_{rm SSS}$ and $t_{rm off}$ are rather different from the above six recurrent novae. We also present theoretical SSS durations for recurrent novae with various WD masses and stellar metallicities ($Z=$0.004, 0.01, 0.02, and 0.05) and compare with observed durations of these recurrent novae. We show that the SSS duration is a good indicator of the WD mass in the recurrent novae with a broad rectangular X-ray light curve shape.



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195 - E.Chiosi , M.Orio , F. Bernardini 2014
We searched optical/UV/IR counterparts of seven supersoft X-ray sources (SSS) in M31 in the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Panchromatic Hubble Andromeda Treasury (PHAT) archival images and photometric catalog. Three of the SSS were transient, the other four are persistent sources. The PHAT offers the opportunity to identify SSS hosting very massive white dwarfs that may explode as type Ia supernovae in single degenerate binaries, with magnitudes and color indexes typical of symbiotic stars, high mass close binaries, or systems with optically luminous accretion disks. We find evidence that the transient SSS were classical or recurrent novae; two likely counterparts we identified are probably symbiotic binaries undergoing mass transfer at a very high rate. There is a candidate accreting white dwarf binary in the error circle of one of the persistent sources, r3-8. In the spatial error circle of the best studied SSS in M31, r2-12, no red giants or AGB stars are sufficiently luminous in the optical and UV bands to be symbiotic systems hosting an accreting and hydrogen burning white dwarf. This SSS has a known modulation of the X-ray flux with a 217.7 s period, and we measured an upper limit on its derivative, 0.82 x 10(-11). This limit can be reconciled with the rotation period of a white dwarf accreting at high rate in a binary with a few-hours orbital period. However, there is no luminous counterpart with color indexes typical of an accretion disk irradiated by a hot central source. Adopting a semi-empirical relationship, the upper limit for the disk optical luminosity implies an upper limit of only 169 minutes for the orbital period of the white dwarf binary.
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