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SWIFT X-RAY AND ULTRAVIOLET MONITORING OF THE CLASSICAL NOVA V458 VUL (NOVA VUL 2007)

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posted on 2012-10-24, 09:21 authored by J-U. Ness, J. J. Drake, A. P. Beardmore, D. Boyd, M. F. Bode, S. Brady, P. A. Evans, B. T. Gaensicke, S. Kitamoto, C. Knigge, I. Miller, J. P. Osborne, K. L. Page, P. Rodriguez-Gil, G. Schwarz, B. Staels, D. Steeghs, D. Takei, M. Tsujimoto, R. Wesson, A. Zijlstra
We describe the highly variable X-ray and UV emission of V458 Vul (Nova Vul 2007), observed by Swift between 1 and 422 days after outburst. Initially bright only in the UV, V458 Vul became a variable hard X-ray source due to optically thin thermal emission at kT = 0.64 keV with an X-ray band unabsorbed luminosity of 2.3 × 10[superscript: 34] erg s[superscript: –1] during days 71-140. The X-ray spectrum at this time requires a low Fe abundance (0.2[superscript: +0.3] [subscript: –0.1] solar), consistent with a Suzaku measurement around the same time. On day 315 we find a new X-ray spectral component which can be described by a blackbody with temperature of kT = 23[superscript: +9] [subscript: –5] eV, while the previous hard X-ray component has declined by a factor of 3.8. The spectrum of this soft X-ray component resembles those typically seen in the class of supersoft sources (SSS) which suggests that the nova ejecta were starting to clear and/or that the white dwarf photosphere is shrinking to the point at which its thermal emission reaches into the X-ray band. We find a high degree of variability in the soft component with a flare rising by an order of magnitude in count rate in 0.2 days. In the following observations on days 342.4-383.6, the soft component was not seen, only to emerge again on day 397. The hard component continued to evolve, and we found an anticorrelation between the hard X-ray emission and the UV emission, yielding a Spearman rank probability of 97%. After day 397, the hard component was still present, was variable, and continued to fade at an extremely slow rate but could not be analyzed owing to pile-up contamination from the bright SSS component.

History

Citation

Astronomical Journal, 2009, 137 (5), pp. 4160-4168

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Astronomical Journal

Publisher

American Astronomical Society (IOP Publishing)

issn

0004-6256

eissn

1538-3881

Copyright date

2009

Available date

2012-10-24

Publisher version

http://iopscience.iop.org/1538-3881/137/5/4160/

Language

English