Polarimetry and Spectroscopy of the `Oxygen Flaring' DQ Herculis-like nova: V5668 Sagittarii (2015)
E. J. Harvey, M. P. Redman, M. J. Darnley, S. C. Williams, A., Berdyugin, V. E. Piirola, K. P. Fitzgerald, E. G. P. O' Connor

TL;DR
This study combines polarimetry and spectroscopy to model the three-dimensional structure and ionisation of the nova V5668 Sagittarii's ejecta, revealing dust scattering, shocks, and oxygen flaring phenomena.
Contribution
It develops a geometrical model integrating polarimetric and spectroscopic data to elucidate the nova shell's morphology and physical conditions, including dust scattering and oxygen flaring.
Findings
Derived the shell's position angle from polarimetry.
Identified shocks affecting the nova outflow.
Explained nitrogen flaring as oxygen flaring from O II multiplet.
Abstract
Classical novae are eruptions on the surface of a white dwarf in a binary system. The material ejected from the white dwarf surface generally forms an axisymmetric shell of gas and dust around the system. The three-dimensional structure of these shells is difficult to untangle when viewed on the plane of the sky. In this work a geometrical model is developed to explain new observations of the 2015 nova V5668 Sagittarii. To understand the ionisation structure in terms of the nova shell morphology and estimate the emission distribution directly following the light-curve's dust-dip. High-cadence optical polarimetry and spectroscopy observations of a nova are presented. The ejecta is modelled in terms of morpho-kinematics and photoionisation structure. Initially observational results are presented, including broadband polarimetry and spectroscopy of V5668 Sgr nova during eruption.…
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