V605 Aquilae: a born again star, a nova or both?
Herbert. H. B. Lau, Orsola De Marco, X. W. Liu

TL;DR
This paper investigates the nature of V605 Aquilae, exploring whether it is a born-again star, a nova, or both, by analyzing its unusual hydrogen-deficient, neon-rich ejecta and proposing two possible scenarios involving stellar mergers or novae.
Contribution
It introduces two novel scenarios to explain V605 Aquilae's unique properties, challenging the traditional final helium shell flash interpretation.
Findings
Neither scenario perfectly explains all observations.
The merger scenario's composition predictions are uncertain.
The nova scenario's occurrence rate appears too low.
Abstract
V605 Aquilae is today widely assumed to have been the result of a final helium shell flash occurring on a single post-asymptotic giant branch star. The fact that the outbursting star is in the middle of an old planetary nebula and that the ejecta associated with the outburst is hydrogen deficient supports this diagnosis. However, the material ejected during that outburst is also extremely neon rich, suggesting that it derives from an oxygen-neon-magnesium star, as is the case in the so-called neon novae. We have therefore attempted to construct a scenario that explains all the observations of the nebula and its central star, including the ejecta abundances. We find two scenarios that have the potential to explain the observations, although neither is a perfect match. The first scenario invokes the merger of a main sequence star and a massive oxygen-neon-magnesium white dwarf. The second…
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