Evolution of the 1919 Ejecta of V605 Aquilae
Geoffrey C. Clayton, Howard E. Bond, Lindsey A. Long, Paul I. Meyer,, Ben E. K. Sugerman, Edward Montiel, William B. Sparks, M. G. Meakes, O., Chesneau, and O. De Marco

TL;DR
This study uses HST imaging to analyze the 1919 ejecta of V605 Aquilae, determining its expansion, distance, and dust content, and discusses its nature as a possible nova or final helium shell flash event.
Contribution
It provides the first direct detection of the central star since 1923 and measures the ejecta's expansion, supporting a nova origin over a final helium shell flash.
Findings
Ejecta expansion velocity ~200 km/s
Distance estimate of 4.6 kpc
Detection of cold dust (~10^-3 M(Sun))
Abstract
New imaging of V605 Aql, was obtained in 2009 with HST/WFPC2, which had a nova-like outburst in 1919, and is located at the center of the planetary nebula (PN), Abell 58. This event has long been ascribed to a final helium shell flash, but it has been suggested recently that it may instead have been an ONe nova. The new images provide an 18 year baseline for the expansion of the ejecta from the 1919 event. In addition, the central star has been directly detected in the visible for the first time since 1923, when it faded from sight due to obscuration by dust. The expansion of the ejecta has a velocity of ~200 km/s, and an angular expansion rate of ~10 mas/yr, consistent with a 1919 ejection. This implies a geometric distance of 4.6 kpc for V605 Aql, consistent with previous estimates. The gas mass in the central knot of ejecta was previously estimated to be 5 x 10^-5 M(Sun). It is…
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