Pan-chromatic observations of the remarkable nova LMC 2012
Abstract
We present the results of an intensive multiwavelength campaign on nova LMC 2012. This nova evolved very rapidly in all observed wavelengths. The time to fall two magnitudes in the V band was only 2 days. In X-rays the super soft phase began 135 days after discovery and ended around day 50 after discovery. During the super soft phase, the /XRT and \ spectra were consistent with the underlying white dwarf being very hot, 1 MK, and luminous, 1038 erg s-1. The UV, optical, and near-IR photometry showed a periodic variation after the initial and rapid fading had ended. Timing analysis revealed a consistent 19.240.03 hr period in all UV, optical, and near-IR bands with amplitudes of 0.3 magnitudes which we associate with the orbital period of the central binary. No periods were detected in the corresponding X-ray data sets. A moderately high inclination system, i = 6010, was inferred from the early optical emission lines. The HST/STIS UV spectra were highly unusual with only the N5 (1240) line present and superposed on a blue continuum. The lack of emission lines and the observed UV and optical continua from four epochs can be fit with a low mass ejection event, 10-6 M, from a hot and massive white dwarf near the Chandrasekhar limit. The white dwarf, in turn, significantly illuminated its subgiant companion which provided the bulk of the observed UV/optical continuum emission at the later dates. The inferred extreme white dwarf characteristics and low mass ejection event favor nova LMC 2012 being a recurrent nova of the U Sco subclass.
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