The 2010 Eruption of the Recurrent Nova U Scorpii: The Multi-Wavelength Light Curve
Ashley Pagnotta, Bradley E. Schaefer, James L. Clem, Arlo U. Landolt,, Gerald Handler, Kim L. Page, Julian P. Osborne, Eric M. Schlegel, Douglas I., Hoffman, Seiichiro Kiyota, Hiroyuki Maehara

TL;DR
This study presents the most comprehensive multi-wavelength light curve of the 2010 U Scorpii eruption, revealing new features and enabling detailed energy and mass estimates, advancing understanding of recurrent nova eruptions.
Contribution
It provides the first complete multi-wavelength light curve from eruption to quiescence, discovering new features and estimating the eruption's radiated energy and ejected mass.
Findings
Nearly fits the broken power law decline predicted by models.
Constructed detailed spectral energy distributions daily.
Estimated total radiated energy as approximately 7 x 10^44 erg.
Abstract
The recurrent nova U Scorpii most recently erupted in 2010. Our collaboration observed the eruption in bands ranging from the Swift XRT and UVOT w2 (193 nm) to K-band (2200 nm), with a few serendipitous observations stretching down to WISE W2 (4600 nm). Considering the time and wavelength coverage, this is the most comprehensively observed nova eruption to date. We present here the resulting multi-wavelength light curve covering the two months of the eruption as well as a few months into quiescence. For the first time, a U Sco eruption has been followed all the way back to quiescence, leading to the discovery of new features in the light curve, including a second, as-yet-unexplained, plateau in the optical and near-infrared. Using this light curve we show that U Sco nearly fits the broken power law decline predicted by Hachisu & Kato, with decline indices of -1.71 +/- 0.02 and -3.36 +/-…
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