Marina Orio, Ke Fang, Jay Gallagher, Gerardo Juan M. Luna, Joanna Mikolajewska
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Shocks in novae outbursts are ubiquitous, but in symbiotic novae, they are particularly powerful, probably because of the surrounding red giant wind. The recurrent nova RS Oph is the best example of this phenomenon. The presence of shocked plasma in outburst was inferred from optical spectra, and it was confirmed by X-ray observations since 1985. Since 2010, the gamma-ray observatory Fermi has proven that novae in general are the site of particle acceleration, producing copious gamma-ray flux in the few-GeV range. In the last outburst of the symbiotic RS Oph in 2021, gamma-rays were not only detected with Fermi in the GeV range but also detected in the TeV range of the Cherenkov telescopes, for about 3 weeks. Diesing et al. in 2023 showed that there must have been at least two distinct episodes of shocks, likely of hadronic nature, both generating particle acceleration. We present new NuSTAR data and re-discuss XMM-Newton high-resolution grating spectra and NICER data that we recently published. We concluded that the primary shock causing the particle acceleration observed in the range of TeV gamma-rays with the Cherenkov telescopes was the same phenomenon observed and studied with the x-ray observatories. However, the shocked plasma from which the particles were accelerated causing the gamma-ray flux observed after 1 day with Fermi was—at least initially—unobservable. We suggest that this first episode of shock occurred when the nova ejecta collided with a dense outflow close to the atmosphere of the red giant, with such a high absorbing column that x-rays were absorbed.
期刊介绍:
Astronomische Nachrichten, founded in 1821 by H. C. Schumacher, is the oldest astronomical journal worldwide still being published. Famous astronomical discoveries and important papers on astronomy and astrophysics published in more than 300 volumes of the journal give an outstanding representation of the progress of astronomical research over the last 180 years. Today, Astronomical Notes/ Astronomische Nachrichten publishes articles in the field of observational and theoretical astrophysics and related topics in solar-system and solar physics. Additional, papers on astronomical instrumentation ground-based and space-based as well as papers about numerical astrophysical techniques and supercomputer modelling are covered. Papers can be completed by short video sequences in the electronic version. Astronomical Notes/ Astronomische Nachrichten also publishes special issues of meeting proceedings.