New X-ray observations of the old nova CP Puppis and of the more recent nova V351 Pup
M. Orio, K. Mukai, A. Bianchini, D. de Martino, S. Howell

TL;DR
This study presents multi-epoch X-ray observations of two novae, CP Pup and V351 Pup, revealing insights into their accretion processes, white dwarf characteristics, and potential magnetic nature, with implications for nova theory.
Contribution
It provides detailed X-ray spectral analysis of CP Pup and V351 Pup, suggesting a magnetic white dwarf in CP Pup and updating the X-ray luminosity measurements for both novae.
Findings
CP Pup's X-ray luminosity remained constant over decades.
CP Pup's spectra indicate a high-mass, magnetic white dwarf.
V351 Pup's X-ray flux decreased significantly since 1993.
Abstract
We present X-ray observations of the field containing Nova Puppis 1942 (CP Pup) and Nova Puppis 1991 (V351 Pup), done with ASCA in 1998, and with XMM-Newton in 2005. The X-ray and UV luminosity of CP Pup seem to have remained approximately constant since the last X-ray observations of the 1980'ies, while the optical luminosity has decreased. The X-ray properties of this nova are explained by a high mass white dwarf accreting at low rate, in agreement with the nova theory given the large amplitude and other characteristics of the 1942 outburst. Assuming a distance of 1600 pc, the X-ray luminosity of CP Pup is L=2.2 x 10(33) erg/s in the 0.15-10 keV range covered with EPIC, compatible with a magnetic system. The RGS grating spectrum shows a few prominent emission lines, and it is fitted with a cooling flow with mass accretion rate mdot <= 1.6 x 10(-10) msol/year. We detected also the O…
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