The enigma of the oldest `nova': the central star and nebula of CK Vul
M. Hajduk, Albert A. Zijlstra, P. A. M. van Hoof, J. A. Lopez, J. E., Drew, A. Evans, S. P. S. Eyres, K. Gesicki, R. Greimel, F. Kerber, S., Kimeswenger, M. G. Richer

TL;DR
This paper investigates CK Vul, an enigmatic stellar object from 1670, revealing its nebula's structure, shock-ionized gas, and possible remnant disk, contributing to understanding its true nature and classification.
Contribution
The study provides detailed radio and optical imaging of CK Vul's nebula, offering new insights into its structure, expansion, and potential origins, which were previously unknown.
Findings
Detected a compact radio source with 1.5 mJy flux at 5 GHz.
Observed nebula expansion consistent with 1670 eruption.
No optical/infrared counterpart at radio source position.
Abstract
CK Vul is classified as, amongst others, the slowest known nova, a hibernating nova, or a very late thermal pulse object. Following its eruption in AD 1670, the star remained visible for 2 years. A 15-arcsec nebula was discovered in the 1980's, but the star itself has not been detected since the eruption. We here present radio images which reveal an 0.1-arcsec radio source with a flux of 1.5 mJy at 5 GHz. Deep Halpha images show a bipolar nebula with a longest extension of 70 arcsec, with the previously known compact nebula at its waist. The emission-line ratios show that the gas is shock-ionized, at velocities >100 km/s. Dust emission yields an envelope mass of ~0.05 Msun. Echelle spectra indicate outflow velocities up to 360 km/s. From a comparison of images obtained in 1991 and 2004 we find evidence for expansion of the nebula, consistent with an origin in the 1670 explosion; the…
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