X-ray monitoring of classical novae in the central region of M 31. I. June 2006 - March 2007
M. Henze, W. Pietsch, F. Haberl, M. Hernanz, G. Sala, M. Della Valle,, D. Hatzidimitriou, A. Rau, D.H. Hartmann, J. Greiner, V. Burwitz, J. Fliri

TL;DR
This study monitored classical novae in M 31 using X-ray telescopes, identifying their supersoft X-ray phases, durations, and physical parameters, revealing that novae are the main source of supersoft X-ray emissions in this galaxy's center.
Contribution
First comprehensive X-ray monitoring of M 31 novae, establishing their SSS phases, durations, and physical parameters, and confirming novae as the dominant SSS population in the galaxy's core.
Findings
Detected 8 X-ray counterparts of novae, 4 newly identified.
Found some SSSs persist over nine years post-outburst.
Short SSS phases correlate with specific nova properties.
Abstract
(Abridged) Classical novae (CNe) have recently been reported to represent the major class of supersoft X-ray sources (SSSs) in the central region of our neighbour galaxy M 31. We carried out a dedicated monitoring of the M 31 central region with XMM-Newton and Chandra in order to find SSS counterparts of CNe, determine the duration of their SSS phase and derive physical outburst parameters. We systematically searched our data for X-ray counterparts of CNe and determined their X-ray light curves and spectral properties. Additionally, we determined luminosity upper limits for all novae from previous studies which are not detected anymore and for all CNe in our field of view with optical outbursts between May 2005 and March 2007. We detected eight X-ray counterparts of CNe in M 31, four of which were not previously known. Seven sources can be classified as SSSs, one is a candidate SSS. Two…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Particle Accelerators and Free-Electron Lasers · Atomic and Molecular Physics
