Swift X-ray and UV monitoring of the Classical Nova V458 Vul (Nova Vul 2007)
J.-U. Ness, J.J. Drake, A.P. Beardmore, D. Boyd, M.F. Bode, S. Brady,, P.A. Evans, B.T. Gaensicke, S. Kitamoto, C. Knigge, I. Miller, J.P. Osborne,, K.L. Page, P. Rodriguez-Gil, G. Schwarz, B. Staels, D. Steeghs, D. Takei, M., Tsujimoto, R. Wesson, A. Zijlstra

TL;DR
This study presents detailed Swift X-ray and UV observations of Nova V458 Vul over 422 days, revealing complex spectral evolution, variable emission components, and insights into the nova's ejecta and white dwarf behavior.
Contribution
First comprehensive multi-epoch X-ray and UV monitoring of V458 Vul, identifying spectral state changes and the emergence of supersoft source characteristics.
Findings
Detected a hard X-ray component with low Fe abundance.
Observed a transient supersoft X-ray component indicating ejecta clearing.
Found an anticorrelation between hard X-ray and UV emissions.
Abstract
We describe the highly variable X-ray and UV emission of V458 Vul (Nova Vul 2007), observed by Swift between 1 and 422 days after outburst. Initially bright only in the UV, V458 Vul became a variable hard X-ray source due to optically thin thermal emission at kT=0.64 keV with an X-ray band unabsorbed luminosity of 2.3x10^{34} erg s^{-1} during days 71-140. The X-ray spectrum at this time requires a low Fe abundance (0.2^{+0.3}_{-0.1} solar), consistent with a Suzaku measurement around the same time. On day 315 we find a new X-ray spectral component which can be described by a blackbody with temperature of kT=23^{+9}_{-5} eV, while the previous hard X-ray component has declined by a factor of 3.8. The spectrum of this soft X-ray component resembles those typically seen in the class of supersoft sources (SSS) which suggests that the nova ejecta were starting to clear and/or that the WD…
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