posted on 2016-12-09, 14:31authored byL. Chomiuk, T. Nelson, K. Mukai, J. L. Sokoloski, M. P. Rupen, Kim L. Page, Julian P. Osborne, E. Kuulkers, A. J. Mioduszewski, N. Roy, J. Weston, M. I. Krauss
The recurrent nova T Pyx underwent its sixth historical outburst in 2011, and became the subject of an intensive
multi-wavelength observational campaign. We analyze data from the Swift and Suzaku satellites to produce a detailed
X-ray light curve augmented by epochs of spectral information. X-ray observations yield mostly non-detections
in the first four months of outburst, but both a super-soft and hard X-ray component rise rapidly after Day 115.
The super-soft X-ray component, attributable to the photosphere of the nuclear-burning white dwarf, is relatively
cool (∼45 eV) and implies that the white dwarf in T Pyx is significantly below the Chandrasekhar mass (∼~1 M☉ ).
The late turn-on time of the super-soft component yields a large nova ejecta mass (~> 10^−5 M☉), consistent with
estimates at other wavelengths. The hard X-ray component is well fit by a ∼1 keV thermal plasma, and is attributed
to shocks internal to the 2011 nova ejecta. The presence of a strong oxygen line in this thermal plasma on Day 194
requires a significantly super-solar abundance of oxygen and implies that the ejecta are polluted by white dwarf
material. The X-ray light curve can be explained by a dual-phase ejection, with a significant delay between the first
and second ejection phases, and the second ejection finally released two months after outburst. A delayed ejection
is consistent with optical and radio observations of T Pyx, but the physical mechanism producing such a delay
remains a mystery.
Funding
We are grateful to R. Williams, A. Ederoclite, M. Bode, R. Smith, and U. Munari for useful conversations. We thank the Suzaku mission for the generous allocation of target-of-opportunity time to observe T Pyx. We also thank Neil Gehrels and the Swift mission team for their support of the target-of-opportunity program for this nova. We acknowledge with thanks the variable star observations from the AAVSO International Database contributed by observers worldwide and used in this research. This work made use of the HEASARC archive, data supplied by the UK Swift Science Data Centre at the University of Leicester, and observations obtained with the Suzaku satellite, a collaborative mission between the space agencies of Japan (JAXA) and the USA (NASA). The National Radio Astronomy Observatory is a facility of the National Science Foundation operated under cooperative agreement by Associated Universities, Inc. L. Chomiuk is a Jansky Fellow of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory. J. Osborne and K. Page acknowledge the support of the UK Space Agency. J. L. Sokoloski and J. Weston acknowledge support from NSF award AST-1211778.
History
Citation
Astrophysical Journal, 788:130 (13pp), 2014 June 20
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Physics and Astronomy