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Nova

Artist's conception of a white dwarf star accreting hydrogen from a larger companion
Artist's conception of a white dwarf star accreting hydrogen from a larger companion
A nova (pl. novae) is a cataclysmic nuclear explosion caused by the accretion of hydrogen onto the surface of a white dwarf star. Novae are not to be confused with Type Ia supernovae, or another form of stellar explosion first announced by Caltech in May 2007, Luminous Red Novae.

Contents


Occurrence rate, and astrophysical significance

Astronomers estimate that the Milky Way experiences roughly 30 to 60 novae per year, with a likely rate of about 40.[1] The number of novae discovered each year is much lower, probably due to great distance and observational biases.[2] By comparison, the number of novae discovered each year in the nearby Andromeda Galaxy is much lower; roughly ½ to ? that of the Milky Way.[3]

Spectroscopic observation of nova ejecta nebulae has shown that they are enriched in elements such as helium, carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, neon, and magnesium.[1] The contribution of novae to the interstellar medium is not great; novae supply only 1/50th the amount of material to the Galaxy as supernovae, and only 1/200th that of red giant and supergiant stars.[1]

Recurrent novae like RS Ophiuchi (those with periods on the order of decades) are rare. Astronomers theorize however that most, if not all, novae are recurrent, albeit on time scales ranging from 1,000 to 100,000 years.[4] The recurrence interval for a nova is less dependent on the white dwarf's accretion rate than on its mass; with their powerful gravity, massive white dwarfs require less accretion to fuel an outburst than lower-mass ones.[1] Consequently, the interval is shorter for high-mass white dwarfs.[1]

Historical significance

The astronomer Tycho Brahe observed the supernova SN 1572 in the constellation Cassiopeia, and described it in his book de stella nova (Latin for "concerning the new star"), giving rise to the name nova. In this work he argued that a nearby object should be seen to move relative to the fixed stars, and that the nova had to be very far away. Though this was a supernova and not a classical nova, the terms were considered interchangeable until the 1930s.[1]

Novae as distance indicators

Novae have some promise for use as standard candles. For instance, the distribution of their absolute magnitude is bimodal, with a main peak at magnitude -7.5, and a lesser one at -8.8. Novae also have roughly the same absolute magnitude 15 days after their peak (-5.5). Comparisons of nova-based distance estimates to various nearby galaxies and galaxy clusters with those done with Cepheid variable stars have shown them to be of comparable accuracy.[5]

Bright novae since 1890

Year Nova Maximum brightness
1891 T Aurigae 3.8 mag
1898 V1059 Sagittarii 4.5 mag
1899 V606 Aquilae 5.5 mag
1901 GK Persei 0.2 mag
1903 DM Geminorum 4.8 mag
1905 V604 Aquilae 7.3 mag
1910 DI Lacertae 4.6 mag
1912 DN Geminorum 3.5 mag
1918 V603 Aquilae −1.4 mag
1919 HR Lyrae 6.5 mag
1919 V849 Ophiuchi 7.4 mag
1920 V476 Cygni 2.0 mag
1920 T Pyxidis 6.4 mag
1925 RR Pictoris 1.2 mag
1927 EL Aquilae 5.5 mag
1927 XX Tauri 5.9 mag
1933 RS Ophiuchi 4.3 mag
1934 DQ Herculis 1.4 mag
1936 CP Lacertae 2.1 mag
1936 V368 Aquilae 5.0 mag
1939 BT Monocerotis 4.5 mag
1942 V450 Cygni 7.0 mag
1942 CP Puppis 0.3 mag
1943 V500 Aquilae 6.1 mag
1944 T Pyxidis 7.1 mag
1945 V528 Aquilae 7.0 mag
1946 T Coronae Borealis 3.0 mag
1948 CT Serpentis 6.0 mag
1948 V465 Cygni 7.3 mag
1950 DK Lacertae 5.0 mag
1956 RW Ursae Minoris 6.0 mag
1958 RS Ophiuchi 5.0 mag
1960 V446 Herculis 2.8 mag
1963 V533 Herculis 3.0 mag
1964 QZ Aurigae 6.0 mag
1967 T Pyxidis 6.7 mag
1967 HR Delphini 3.7 mag
1967 RS Ophiuchi 5.0 mag
1968 LV Vulpeculae 5.2 mag
1970 FH Serpentis 4.4 mag
1970 V1229 Aquilae 6.7 mag
1970 V1330 Cygni 7.5 mag
1971 IV Cephei 7.0 mag
1975 V1500 Cygni 1.7 mag
1975 V373 Scuti 6.0 mag
1976 NQ Vulpeculae 6.0 mag
1977 HS Sagittae 7.2 mag
1978 V1668 Cygni 6.0 mag
1982 V1370 Aquilae 6.0 mag
1984 PW Vulpeculae 6.4 mag
1984 QU Vulpeculae 5.2 mag
1985 RS Ophiuchi 5.4 mag
1986 V842 Centauri 4.6 mag
1986 OS Andromedae 6.3 mag
1987 V827 Herculis 7.5 mag
1987 QV Vulpeculae 7.0 mag
1991 V838 Herculis 5.0 mag
1992 V1974 Cygni 4.2 mag
1993 V705 Cassiopeiae 5.8 mag
1999 V382 Velorum 2.6 mag
1999 V1494 Aquilae 4.0 mag
2006 RS Ophiuchi 4.5 mag
2007 V1280 Scorpii 3.9 mag http://www.aavso.org/publications/alerts/alert346.shtml,http://www.aavso.org/cgi-bin/newql.pl?name=V1280%20Sco&output=html

Note: Please add all novae brighter than 6 mag http://www.tsm.toyama.toyama.jp/curators/aroom/var/nova/1600.htm

Recurrent novae

See also

Notes

References

  1. a b c d e f Prialnik, Dina. "Novae", pp. 1846-56, in Paul Murdin, ed. Encyclopedia of Astronomy and Astrophysics. London: Institute of Physics Publishing Ltd and Nature Publishing Group, 2001. ISBN 1-56159-268-4
  2. Muirden, James. "Searching for Novae", pp. 259-79. In James Muirden, ed., Sky Watcher's Handbook. New York: W.H. Freeman and Company Ltd., 1993. ISBN 0-7167-4502-X
  3. W. Liller, B. Mayer, July 1987, "The rate of nova production in the Galaxy", Publications Astronomical Society of the Pacific, vol. 99, pp. 606-609.
  4. Seeds, Michael A. Horizons: Exploring the Universe, 5th ed. Belmont: Wadsworth Publishing Company, 1998, ISBN 0-534-52434-6, p.194.
  5. Alloin, D., and W. Gieren, eds. Stellar Candles for the Extragalactic Distance Scale. Robert Gilmozzi and Massimo Della Valle, "Novae as Distance Indicators", pp. 229-241. Berlin: Springer, 2003. ISBN 3-540-20128-9.

External links

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