The Nova Shell and Evolution of the Recurrent Nova T Pyxidis
Bradley E. Schaefer, Ashley Pagnotta, and Michael M. Shara

TL;DR
This study uses HST observations to analyze the nova shell of T Pyxidis, revealing its ejection history, accretion dynamics, and future evolutionary cycle from recurrent nova to hibernation.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the shell expansion, ejection timing, and accretion rate evolution, highlighting the transition from an ordinary nova to a hibernation phase.
Findings
Knots are expanding at 500-715 km/s with no deceleration.
The 1866 event was an ordinary nova, not a recurrent nova eruption.
T Pyx will enter hibernation in about 2.6 million years.
Abstract
T Pyxidis is the prototypical recurrent nova (RN) with a mysterious nova shell. We report new observations of the shell with HST. The knots in the shell are expanding with velocities 500-715 km/s, for a distance of 3500 pc. The fractional expansion of the knots is constant, and this implies no significant deceleration. Hence, the knots were ejected by an eruption close to the year 1866. Knots have turned on after 1995, and this demonstrates that the knots are powered by shocks from the collision of the 1866 ejecta with fast ejecta from later RN eruptions. The 1866 ejecta has a total mass of 10^-4.5 Msun, which with the low ejection velocity shows that the 1866 event was an ordinary nova eruption, not a RN eruption. The accretion rate before the ordinary nova event must have been low (around the 4x10^-11 Msun/yr expected for gravitational radiation alone) and the matter accumulated on…
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