Nova M31N 2007-12b: Supersoft X-rays reveal an intermediate polar?
W. Pietsch, M. Henze, F. Haberl, M. Hernanz, G. Sala, D.H. Hartmann,, M. Della Valle

TL;DR
This study analyzes X-ray observations of nova M31N 2007-12b, revealing a short supersoft phase, a stable WD rotation period, and evidence suggesting it is an intermediate polar system with a magnetic white dwarf.
Contribution
It provides the first evidence that nova M31N 2007-12b is an intermediate polar, based on X-ray timing and spectral analysis, and estimates key system parameters.
Findings
Short supersoft X-ray phase of 60-120 days.
Detection of a 1110 s stable pulsation indicating WD rotation.
Evidence of a magnetic WD consistent with an intermediate polar.
Abstract
For the He/N nova M31N 2007-12b, we analyzed XMM-Newton EPIC and Chandra HRC-I observations of our monitoring program performed at intervals of ten days and added results of a XMM-Newton target of opportunity observation and Swift XRT observations. The supersoft source (SSS) emission started between 21 and 30 d after the optical outburst and ended between 60 and 120 d after outburst, making M31N 2007-12b one of the few novae with the shortest SSS phase known. The X-ray spectrum was supersoft and can be fitted with a white dwarf (WD) atmosphere model with solar abundances absorbed by the Galactic foreground. The temperature of the WD atmosphere seems to increase at the beginning of the SSS phase from ~70 to ~80 eV. The luminosity of M31N 2007-12b during maximum was at the Eddington limit of a massive WD and dropped by ~30% in the observation 60 d after outburst. The radius of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
