V4743 Sgr, a magnetic nova?
P. Zemko, M. Orio, K. Mukai, A. Bianchini, S. Ciroi, V. Cracco

TL;DR
This study presents X-ray and optical observations of Nova V4743 Sgr, suggesting it is an intermediate polar with a transient supersoft component likely due to surface or nuclear burning phenomena, observed years after outburst.
Contribution
First detailed multi-epoch X-ray and optical analysis indicating V4743 Sgr as a magnetic nova with evolving spectral features and a rare post-outburst supersoft component.
Findings
Detected ~0.75 mHz modulation indicating an intermediate polar.
Observed disappearance of the supersoft X-ray component over time.
Identified a hot optical region with high ionization lines.
Abstract
Two XMM Newton observations of Nova V4743 Sgr (Nova Sgr 2002) were performed shortly after it returned to quiescence, 2 and 3.5 years after the explosion. The X-ray light curves revealed a modulation with a frequency of ~0.75 mHz, indicating that V4743 Sgr is most probably an intermediate polar (IP). The X-ray spectra have characteristics in common with known IPs, with a hard thermal plasma component that can be fitted only assuming a partially covering absorber. In 2004 the X-ray spectrum had also a supersoft blackbody-like component, whose temperature was close to that of the white dwarf (WD) in the supersoft X-ray phase following the outburst, but with flux by at least two orders of magnitude lower. In quiescent IPs, a soft X-ray flux component originates at times in the polar regions irradiated by an accretion column, but the supersoft component of V4743 Sgr disappeared in 2006,…
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