Literature DB >> 27533036

The awakening of a classical nova from hibernation.

Przemek Mróz1, Andrzej Udalski1, Paweł Pietrukowicz1, Michał K Szymański1, Igor Soszyński1, Łukasz Wyrzykowski1, Radosław Poleski1,2, Szymon Kozłowski1, Jan Skowron1, Krzysztof Ulaczyk1,3, Dorota Skowron1, Michał Pawlak1.   

Abstract

Cataclysmic variable stars-novae, dwarf novae, and nova-likes-are close binary systems consisting of a white dwarf star (the primary) that is accreting matter from a low-mass companion star (the secondary). From time to time such systems undergo large-amplitude brightenings. The most spectacular eruptions, with a ten-thousandfold increase in brightness, occur in classical novae and are caused by a thermonuclear runaway on the surface of the white dwarf. Such eruptions are thought to recur on timescales of ten thousand to a million years. In between, the system's properties depend primarily on the mass-transfer rate: if it is lower than a billionth of a solar mass per year, the accretion becomes unstable and the matter is dumped onto the white dwarf during quasi-periodic dwarf nova outbursts. The hibernation hypothesis predicts that nova eruptions strongly affect the mass-transfer rate in the binary, keeping it high for centuries after the event. Subsequently, the mass-transfer rate should significantly decrease for a thousand to a million years, starting the hibernation phase. After that the nova awakes again-with accretion returning to the pre-eruption level and leading to a new nova explosion. The hibernation model predicts cyclical evolution of cataclysmic variables through phases of high and low mass-transfer. The theory gained some support from the discovery of ancient nova shells around the dwarf novae Z Camelopardalis and AT Cancri, but direct evidence for considerable mass-transfer changes prior, during and after nova eruptions has not hitherto been found. Here we report long-term observations of the classical nova V1213 Cen (Nova Centauri 2009) covering its pre- and post-eruption phases and precisely documenting its evolution. Within the six years before the explosion, the system revealed dwarf nova outbursts indicative of a low mass-transfer rate. The post-nova is two orders of magnitude brighter than the pre-nova at minimum light with no trace of dwarf nova behaviour, implying that the mass-transfer rate increased considerably as a result of the nova explosion.

Year:  2016        PMID: 27533036     DOI: 10.1038/nature19066

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  1 in total

1.  An ancient nova shell around the dwarf nova Z Camelopardalis.

Authors:  Michael M Shara; Christopher D Martin; Mark Seibert; R Michael Rich; Samir Salim; David Reitzel; David Schiminovich; Constantine P Deliyannis; Angela R Sarrazine; Shri R Kulkarni; Eran O Ofek; Noah Brosch; Sebastien Lépine; David Zurek; Orsola De Marco; George Jacoby
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2007-03-08       Impact factor: 49.962

  1 in total

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