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Turbulent Disk
Asymmetric accretion disk causes X-ray flux variations in bright
supersoft nova

Illustration: Mark A. Garlick
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The artistic view shows a cataclysmic variable, the kind of close binary
systems that host classical novae
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When a white dwarf accretes matter from his larger companion star and after
reaching a critical mass ejects it in an explosion a nova occurs. Soft X-rays
from classical novae are especially interesting for astronomers: They reveal
ongoing residual hydrogen burning after the explosion and so give evidence
that some of the accreted material is left on the white dwarf surface after
the ejection. In this way the long-term evolution of the white dwarf in a
binary system can be studied, for example to answer the question if the nova
will later transform into a type Ia supernova, the most luminous supernova
type.
Gloria Sala and Jochen Greiner from the Max Planck Institute for
extraterrestrial Physics and their colleagues Margarita Hernanz and Carlo
Ferri from the Institut de Cičncies de l'Espai (CSIC-IEEC) in Bellaterra,
Spain, observed postoutburst nova V5116 Sgr, discovered on 2005 July 4,
with the ESA X-ray observatory XMM-Newton and present the X-ray light curve
and broadband spectrum in a recent paper (The Astrophysical Journal Letters,
2008 March 10). Although the X-ray light curve shows abrupt decreases and
increases of the flux, the white dwarf atmosphere temperature is the same
both in the low- and the high-flux periods. So Sala and her colleagues negate
an intrinsic variation of the X-ray source itself as the origin of the
flux changes.
Instead the flux variation can be explained by some partial coverage or
eclipse. An eclipse from the companion star can be ruled out because of
the curve shape: "A coverage by the secondary star would cause a short
low-flux and a long high-flux period. But the light-curve of this nova
has two peaks and an extended low-flux period between them", Gloria Sala
explained. So the only thing left in the system that could obscure the X-ray
source is the accretion disk rotating around the white dwarf. "If the white
dwarf had a magnetic field it would disrupt the disk and create strange
shapes in the accretion stream", said Sala. The consequence would be an
asymmetric form of the accretion disk. Sala and her colleagues believe this
to be the cause of the variations in the X-ray emission.
"We cannot say exactly from our data how the disk is, or if there really
is a magnetic field, but we know that asymmetric disks exist in cataclysmic
variables", comments Sala. The scientists now want to verify their proposition
in a longer observation period.
Original paper:
Astrophys. Journ. Letters, 675, L93 - L96, 2008
Press release:
ESA
Contact:
Dr. Mona Clerico
Press Officer
Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics
and Max Planck Institute for extraterrestrial Physics
Phone +49 89 30000-3980
Email: clerico@mpe.mpg.de
Dr. Gloria Sala
Max Planck Institute for extraterrestrial Physics
Phone +49 89 30000-3848
Email: gsala@mpe.mpg.de
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