Inflows, Outflows, and a Giant Donor in the Remarkable Recurrent Nova M31N 2008-12a? - Hubble Space Telescope Photometry of the 2015 Eruption
M. J. Darnley, R. Hounsell, P. Godon, D. A. Perley, M. Henze, N. P. M., Kuin, B. F. Williams, S. C. Williams, M. F. Bode, D. J. Harman, K. Hornoch,, M. Link, J.-U. Ness, V. A. R. M. Ribeiro, E. M. Sion, A. W. Shafter, M. M., Shara

TL;DR
This study uses Hubble Space Telescope data to analyze the 2015 eruption of the recurrent nova M31N 2008-12a, revealing insights into its accretion disk, mass transfer, and potential to reach the Chandrasekhar limit within 20,000 years.
Contribution
First detailed constraints on the accretion disk and donor star in M31N 2008-12a, highlighting high accretion rates and potential for supernova progenitor evolution.
Findings
Accretion disk survives eruptions with high mass accretion rates.
Donor star likely an irradiated red-clump star with specific luminosity, radius, and temperature.
White dwarf could reach Chandrasekhar mass in less than 20,000 years.
Abstract
The recurrent nova M31N 2008-12a experiences annual eruptions, contains a near-Chandrasekhar mass white dwarf, and has the largest mass accretion rate in any nova system. In this paper, we present Hubble Space Telescope (HST) WFC3/UVIS photometry of the late decline of the 2015 eruption. We couple these new data with archival HST observations of the quiescent system and Keck spectroscopy of the 2014 eruption. The late-time photometry reveals a rapid decline to a minimum luminosity state, before a possible recovery / re-brightening in the run-up to the next eruption. Comparison with accretion disk models supports the survival of the accretion disk during the eruptions, and uncovers a quiescent disk mass accretion rate of the order of , which may rise beyond during the super-soft source phase - both of which could be…
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