Gamma-Ray Observations of Nova Sgr 2015 No. 2 with INTEGRAL
Thomas Siegert, Alain Coc, Laura Delgado, Roland Diehl, Jochen, Greiner, Margarita Hernanz, Pierre Jean, Jordi Jose, Paolo Molaro, Moritz M., M. Pleintinger, Volodymyr Savchenko, Sumner Starrfield, Vincent Tatischeff,, Christoph Weinberger

TL;DR
This study used INTEGRAL gamma-ray observations to search for radioactive decay signatures in nova V5668 Sgr, setting upper limits on synthesized isotopes and identifying potential pre-maximum burst events, but found no significant gamma-ray line detections.
Contribution
First gamma-ray observational constraints on Be-7 and Na-22 production in nova V5668 Sgr, with analysis of pre-maximum burst-like events using INTEGRAL data.
Findings
No significant gamma-ray line detection at 478 keV, 511 keV, or 1275 keV.
Upper limits on Be-7 and Na-22 mass synthesized in the nova.
Possible pre-maximum burst-like events identified in the ACS data.
Abstract
INTEGRAL observed the nova V5668 Sgr around the time of its optical maximum on March 21, 2015. Studies at UV wavelengths showed spectral lines of freshly produced Be-7. This could be measurable also in gamma-rays at 478 keV from the decay to Li-7. Novae are also expected to synthesise Na-22 which decays to Ne-22, emitting a 1275 keV photon. About one week before the optical maximum, a strong gamma-ray flash on time-scales of hours is expected from short-lived radioactive nuclei, such as N-13 and F-18. These beta-plus-unstable nuclei should yield emission up to 511 keV, but which has never been observed. The spectrometer SPI aboard INTEGRAL pointed towards V5668 by chance. We use these observations to search for possible gamma-ray emission of decaying Be-7, and to directly measure the synthesised mass during explosive burning. We also aim to constrain possible burst-like emission days to…
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