A remarkable recurrent nova in M 31: The predicted 2014 outburst in X-rays with Swift
M. Henze, J.-U. Ness, M. J. Darnley, M. F. Bode, S. C. Williams, A. W., Shafter, G. Sala, M. Kato, I. Hachisu, M. Hernanz

TL;DR
This study reports on the 2014 X-ray outburst of the recurrent nova M31N 2008-12a in M31, using Swift observations to analyze its multiwavelength evolution, and compares it with previous eruptions and Galactic RNe.
Contribution
First detailed X-ray monitoring of the fastest known recurrent nova in M31, providing insights into its outburst characteristics and white dwarf properties.
Findings
Detected SSS emission around day six post-outburst
SSS phase lasted approximately two weeks
X-ray properties similar to previous eruptions
Abstract
The M 31 nova M31N 2008-12a was recently found to be a recurrent nova (RN) with a recurrence time of about 1 year. This is by far the fastest recurrence time scale of any known RNe. Our optical monitoring programme detected the predicted 2014 outburst of M31N 2008-12a in early October. We immediately initiated an X-ray/UV monitoring campaign with Swift to study the multiwavelength evolution of the outburst. We monitored M31N 2008-12a with daily Swift observations for 20 days after discovery, covering the entire supersoft X-ray source (SSS) phase. We detected SSS emission around day six after outburst. The SSS state lasted for approximately two weeks until about day 19. M31N 2008-12a was a bright X-ray source with a high blackbody temperature. The X-ray properties of this outburst were very similar to the 2013 eruption. Combined X-ray spectra show a fast rise and decline of the effective…
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