Exquisite Nova Light Curves from the Solar Mass Ejection Imager (SMEI)
R. Hounsell (1), M. F. Bode (1), P. P. Hick (2), A. Buffington (2), B., V. Jackson (2), J. M. Clover (2), A. W. Shafter (3), M. J. Darnley (1), N. R., Mawson (1), I. A. Steele (1), A. Evans (4), S. P. S. Eyres (5), T. J., O'Brien (6) ((1) Astrophysics Research Institute

TL;DR
This paper presents high-resolution light curves of several novae from SMEI data, revealing detailed eruption features and suggesting many bright novae are overlooked, with implications for nova observation strategies.
Contribution
First detailed high-cadence light curves of novae from SMEI, enabling analysis of eruption phases and discovery of previously unnoticed fast novae.
Findings
Pre-maximum halt observed in all three fast novae
Two novae discovered post-maximum, highlighting observational gaps
Estimated up to 5 novae per year detectable by SMEI
Abstract
We present light curves of three classical novae (KT Eridani, V598 Puppis, V1280 Scorpii) and one recurrent nova (RS Ophiuchi) derived from data obtained by the Solar Mass Ejection Imager (SMEI) on board the Coriolis satellite. SMEI provides near complete sky-map coverage with precision visible-light photometry at 102-minute cadence. The light curves derived from these sky maps offer unprecedented temporal resolution around, and especially before, maximum light, a phase of the nova eruption normally not covered by ground-based observations. They allow us to explore fundamental parameters of individual objects including the epoch of the initial explosion, the reality and duration of any pre-maximum halt (found in all three fast novae in our sample), the presence of secondary maxima, speed of decline of the initial light curve, plus precise timing of the onset of dust formation (in V1280…
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