Metallicity and effective temperature of the secondary of RS Oph
Ya.V.Pavlenko (MAO), A.Evans (Keele Univ), T.Kerr (JAC), L.Yakovina, (MAO), C.E.Woodward (Minnesota Univ), D.Lynch (Aerospace Corp), R.Rudy, (Aerospace Corp), R.L.Pearson (Aerospace Corp, Brigham Young Univ),, R.W.Russell (Aerospace Corp)

TL;DR
This study models the infrared spectrum of RS Oph's red giant secondary to determine its temperature and metallicity, providing insights into how the secondary's composition influences recurrent nova eruptions.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed spectral fitting method using synthetic spectra to accurately determine the secondary star's properties in the RS Oph system.
Findings
Red giant effective temperature is 4100 +/- 100 K.
Metallicity [Fe/H] is approximately solar.
The secondary shows enhanced nitrogen and depleted carbon abundances.
Abstract
The recurrent nova RS Oph undergoes nova eruptions every ~ 10-20years as a result of thermonuclear runaway on the surface of a white dwarf close to the Chandrasekhar limit. Both the progress of the eruption, and its aftermath, depend on the (poorly known) composition of the red giant in the RS Oph system. Our aim is to understand better the effect of the giant secondary on the recurrent nova eruption. Synthetic spectra were computed for a grid of M-giant model atmospheres having a range of effective temperatures 3200 < Teff < 4400 K, gravities 0 < log g < 1 and abundances -4 <[Fe/H] < 0.5, and fit to infrared spectra of RS Oph as it returned to quiescence after its 2006 eruption. We have modelled the infrared spectrum in the range 1.4-2.5 micron to determine metallicity and effective temperature of the red giant. We find Teff = 4100 +/- 100 K, log g = 0.0 +/- 0.5, [Fe/H] = 0.0 +/- 0.5,…
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