4.7 Article

The multiwavelength view of shocks in the fastest nova V1674 Her

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 521, Issue 4, Pages 5453-5472

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stad887

Keywords

stars: individual: V1674Her; novae; cataclysmic variables; white dwarfs; transients: novae

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V1674 Her is the fastest nova ever recorded that challenges our understanding of shock formation in novae. Through coordinated observations in different wavelengths, we found that the emission from V1674 Her can be explained by thermal and synchrotron radiation. Short-lived gamma-ray emission was detected in the 0.1-100 GeV range within 18 hours after the eruption of the nova began.
Classical novae are shock-powered multiwavelength transients triggered by a thermonuclear runaway on an accreting white dwarf. V1674 Her is the fastest nova ever recorded (time to declined by two magnitudes is t(2) = 1.1 d) that challenges our understanding of shock formation in novae. We investigate the physical mechanisms behind nova emission from GeV gamma-rays to cm-band radio using coordinated Fermi-LAT, NuSTAR, Swift, and VLA observations supported by optical photometry. Fermi-LAT detected short-lived (18 h) 0.1-100 GeV emission from V1674 Her that appeared 6 h after the eruption began; this was at a level of (1.6 +/- 0.4) x 10(-6) photons cm(-2) s(-1). Eleven days later, simultaneous NuSTAR and Swift X-ray observations revealed optically thin thermal plasma shock-heated to kT(shock) = 4 keV. The lack of a detectable 6.7 keV Fe K alpha emission suggests super-solar CNO abundances. The radio emission from V1674 Her was consistent with thermal emission at early times and synchrotron at late times. The radio spectrum steeply rising with frequency may be a result of either free-free absorption of synchrotron and thermal emission by unshocked outer regions of the nova shell or the Razin-Tsytovich effect attenuating synchrotron emission in dense plasma. The development of the shock inside the ejecta is unaffected by the extraordinarily rapid evolution and the intermediate polar host of this nova.

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