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We investigated the optical lightcurve of T Pyx during its 2011 outburst by compiling a database of SMEI and AAVSO observations. The SMEI lightcurve, providing unprecedented detail covering 1.5-49d post-discovery, was divided into four phases based on the idealised CN optical lightcurve; the initial rise (1.5-3.3d), the pre-maximum halt (3.3-13.3d), the final rise (14.7-27.9d), and the early decline (27.9d-). The SMEI lightcurve contains a strongly detected period of 1.44+/-0.05d during the pre-maximum phase. These oscillations resemble those found in TNR models arising from instabilities in the expanding envelope. No spectral variation mirroring the lightcurve periodicity was found. A marked dip at 22-24d just before maximum light (27.9d) may represent the same phenomenon seen in novae observed by SMEI. Spectra from the Liverpool Telescope and SMARTS 1.5m were obtained from 0.8-80.7 and 155.1-249.9d, covering the major phases of development. A distinct high velocity ejection phase was evident during the early rise (V~4000 km/s). A marked drop at 5.7d, and then a gradual increase occurred in the ejection velocity which stabilised at ~1500 km/s at the pre-maximum halt. Here we propose two stages of mass loss, a short-lived phase occurring immediately after outburst, lasting ~6d, followed by a steadily evolving and higher mass loss phase. The overall spectral development follows that typical of a CN and comparison with the photometric behaviour reveals consistencies with the evolving pseudo-photosphere model of a CN outburst. Comparing optical spectra to X-ray and radio lightcurves, weak [Fe X] 6375 Angstrom emission was marginally detected before the X-ray rise and was clearly present during the brightest phase of X-ray emission. If the onset of the X-ray phase and the start of the optical final decline are related to the cessation of significant mass loss, then this occurred at 90-110d.
We continue our study of the physical properties of the recurrent nova T Pyx, focussing on the structure of the ejecta in the nebular stage of expansion during the 2011 outburst. The nova was observed contemporaneously with the Nordic Optical Telesco
We present Spitzer Space Telescope and Herschel Space Observatory infrared observations of the recurrent nova T Pyx during its 2011 eruption, complemented by ground-base optical-infrared photometry. We find that the eruption has heated dust in the pr
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
T Pyxidis is the only recurrent nova surrounded by knots of material ejected in previous outbursts. Following the eruption that began on 2011 April 14.29, we obtained seven epochs (from 4 to 383 days after eruption) of Hubble Space Telescope narrowba
With six recorded nova outbursts, the prototypical recurrent nova T Pyxidis is the ideal cataclysmic variable system to assess the net change of the white dwarf mass within a nova cycle. Recent estimates of the mass ejected in the 2011 outburst range