ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
The evidence for the presence of optically thick winds, produced by classical novae after optical maximum, has been challenged in recent papers. In addition, signs of orbital phase dependent photometric variations, sometimes seen quite early in the development of nova outbursts, are hard to interpret in the framework of optically thick envelopes and especially winds. A general discussion for belief in the presence of optically thick winds with increasing ejection velocities during the early stages of novae after their explosion, must be given. This has to be done in order to clarify ideas about novae as well as to contribute in particular to the understanding of the behaviour of novae V1500 Cyg and V1493 Aql showing phase dependent variations during very early decline after the outburst. Possible ways of overcoming the apparent contradiction of phase dependent variations through the production of deviations from spherical symmetry of the winds, are looked at and order of magnitude estimates are made for different theoretical scenarios, which might produce such deviations. It is found that large deviations from spherical symmetry of the optically thick winds in early phases after the explosion can easily explain the problem of variations. In particular, the presence of a magnetic field might have had a non-negligible effect on the wind of V1500 Cyg, while at the present there is not enough information available concerning V1493 Aql. Optically thick winds/envelopes are almost certainly present in the early stages after optical maximum of a nova, while it is difficult to make pure Hubble flow models fit the observations of those stages. New more detailed observational and theoretical work, in particular including the effects of magnetic fields on the winds, is needed.
Here we compute detailed model spectra of recently published optically thick one-dimensional radial baundary layer (BL) models in cataclysmic variables and compare them with observed soft X-ray/extreme ultraviolet (EUV) spectra of dwarf novae in outb
The nova T Pyx was observed with high resolution spectroscopy (R ~ 65000) spectroscopy, beginning 1 day after discovery of the outburst and continuing through the last visibility of the star at the end of May 2011. The interstellar absorption lines o
Recent observation of some luminous transient sources with low color temperatures suggests that the emission is dominated by optically thick winds driven by super-Eddington accretion. We present a general analytical theory of the dynamics of radiatio
We present the first polarimetric observations of a Type I superluminous supernova (SLSN). LSQ14mo was observed with VLT/FORS2 at five different epochs in the V band, with the observations starting before maximum light and spanning 26 days in the res
We consider the consequences of appreciable line optical depth for the profile shape of X-ray emission lines formed in stellar winds. The hot gas is thought to arise in distributed wind shocks, and the line formation is predominantly via collisional